
Book_^EsCil_„ 



THE POEMS 



OF 



VALERIUS CATULLUS, 

TRANSLATED INTO ENGLISH VERSE. 

WITH 

LIFE OF THE POET, EXCURSUS, AND 
ILLUSTRATIVE NOTES. 



BY 

JAMES CRANSTOUN, B.A. 



- spirat adhuc amor.' 



EDINBURGH: 

WILLIAM P. NIMMO. 

1867. 



i*$ 



JOANNI CARMICHAEL, A.M., EDIMB., 

IN SCHOLA REGIA EDIMBURGENSI 

MAGISTRO, 

VIRO OPTIMO ET ERUDITISSIMO, 

PIETATIS CAUSA, 

CATULLI VERONENSIS LIBELLUM, 

AB SE INTERPRETATUM, 
D. D. D. 

JACOBUS CRANSTOUN. 



PREFACE. 



The following version of the Poems of Catullus — 
executed during the translator's leisure hours — is 
submitted to the public, not with the view of super- 
seding existing translations, but of more widely 
diffusing an acquaintance with a poet who is now 
beginning to meet with some degree of the atten- 
tion he deserves. The plan of reproducing all 
the poems may appear objectionable to some ; but 
to the translator it seemed preferable to that of 
mutilating the poet, and presenting him in a totally 
different aspect from that in which he has revealed 
himself in his writings. Moreover, a translator, if 
he is anxious to give anything like an exact reflex 
of his author — which ought surely to be his highest 
aim — can never be justified in suppressing the one 



vi PREFACE. 



half of his works merely to give him a more respect- 
able appearance. Of all the Latin poets, Catullus, 
perhaps, can least afford to submit to this excising 
process. His expressions, it is true, are often in- 
tensely sensuous, sometimes even grossly licentious, 
but to obliterate these and to clothe him in the garb 
of purity would be to misrepresent him entirely. He 
would be Atys, not Catullus. 

In the present translation, except in very rare in- 
stances, no omission, even to the extent of a line, 
has been made, and this has occurred only when it 
has been deemed inexpedient to give the English 
equivalents. 

Some of the poems, for obvious reasons, have not 
been rendered with the same verbal accuracy as 
others, but in all of them it has been the aim of the 
translator to preserve, so far as possible, the force 
and spirit of the original. 

The notes and excursus in the latter part of the 
volume, and more especially the translations of pas- 
sages, principally from the Augustan and post-Augus- 
tan poets, will, it is hoped, prove interesting to those 
who are engaged in the actual study of Catullus. 



PREFACE. vii 



These could easily have been multiplied, and parallels 
and imitations introduced from modern poets, but 
they would have swelled the bulk of the volume to 
an extent never contemplated. 

The translator would here gratefully acknowledge 
his obligations to the notes contained in the admir- 
able edition of "Catullus' 7 by Doering, to the "Ro- 
man Poets of the Republic" by Professor Sellar, and 
to the articles on Latin poetry, by the Rev. Henry 
Thompson, in the Encyclopaedia Metropolitan^ as 
well as to the Observationes Criticae (Catullianae) of 
Haupt, the Quaestiones Catullianae of Schwabe, and 
the few but valuable textual remarks of Rossbach, 
prefixed to his careful edition of Catullus. 

To Professor Sellar of the University of Edinburgh, 
to Professor Nichol of the University of Glasgow, and 
to his much-esteemed friend Mr John Carmichael 
of the High School of Edinburgh, the translator's 
special thanks are due, for much valuable assist- 
ance, most cordially given, during the progress of 
the work. 

The text principally followed, although every avail- 
able one has been consulted, is that of Doering. 



vin PREFACE, 



When it has been materially departed from, the 
edition which has been followed is specified. 

Should this translation be the means of making 
the works of Catullus better known, or of affording 
some slight aid to the youthful student, the trans- 
lator will consider himself amply repaid for his self- 
imposed and by no means irksome toil. 



Grammar School, Kirkcudbright, 
March 1867. 



CONTENTS. 







PAGE 




Life of Catullus, 


3 


I. 


To Cornelius Nepos, 


27 


II. 


To Lesbia's Sparrow, 


28 


III. 


On the Death of the Sparrow, 


29 


IV. 


Dedication of his Pinnace, . 


30 


V. 


To Lesbia, .... 


3i 


VI. 


To Flavius, 


32 


VII. 


To Lesbia, .... 


33 


VIII. 


To Himself, on Lesbia's Inconstancy, 


34 


IX. 


To Verannius, on his Return from Spain, 


35 


X. 


On the Mistress of Varus, 


35 


XI. 


To Furius and Aurelius — the Farewell Mes 






sage to Lesbia, 


37 


XII. 


To Asinius, . . 


38 


XIII. 


To Fabullus — Invitation to Dinner, 


39 


XIV. 


To Licinius Calvus, 


40 


XV. 


To Aurelius, 


41 


XVI. 


To Aurelius and Furius, 


42 


XVII. 


To a Certain Town, 


43 


tVIII. 


To the Garden God, 


45 


XIX. 


The Garden God, 


45 


XX. 


The Garden God, 


46 


XXI. 


To Aurelius, 


47 



CONTENTS. 



XXII. 


To Varus, .... 


PAGE 

43 


XXIII. 


To Furius, .... 


49 


XXIV. 


To a Beauty, ■ . 


5o 


XXV. 


To Thallus, .... 


5o 


XXVI. 


To Furius, .... 


5* 


XXVII. 


To his Cupbearer— Two Versions, . 


52 


XXVIII. 


To Verannius and Fabullus, 


53 


XXIX. 


On Mamurra, Addressed to Caesar, 


54 


XXX. 


To AlpHenus, 


55 


XXXI. 


To the Peninsula of Sirmio, on his Returr 
to his Villa there, 


1 

56 


XXXII. 


To Ipsithilla, 


57 


XXXIII. 


On the Vibennii, 


58 


XXXIV. 


Hymn to Diana, 


59 


XXXV. 


To Caecilius, 


60 


XXXVI. 


On the Annals of Volusius, 


61 


XXXVII. 


To the Frequenters of a Certain Tavern, 


62 


XXXVIII. 


To Cornificius, 


63 


XXXIX. 


On Egnatius, 


64 


XL. 


To Ravidus, 


65 


XLI. 


On the Mistress of Formianus, 


65 


XLII. 


On a Certain Female, 


66 


XLIII. 


On the Mistress of Formianus, 


67 


XLIV. 


To his Farm, 


67 


XLV. 


On Acme and Septimhis, 


68 


XLVI. 


To Himself, on the Return of Spring, 


70 


XLVII. 


To Porcius and Socration, 


70 


XLVIII. 


On a Beauty, 


7i 


XLIX. 


To Cicero, .... 


7i 


L. 


To Licinius, 


72 


LI. a 


To Lesbia, .... 


73 


LI. b 


Fragment, .... 


74 


LII. 


To Himself, on Struma and Vatinius, 


74 


LIII. 


On Somebody and Calvus, 


74 


LIV. 


To Caesar, .... 


75 


LV. 


To Camerius, . 


75 





CONTENTS. 


xi 






PAGE 


LVI. 


To Cato, .... 


77 


LVII. 


To Mamurra and Caesar, 


77 


LVIII. 


To Coelius, Concerning Lesbia, 


78 


LIX. 


On Rufa and Rufulus, 


78 


LX. 


Fragment, .... 


79 


LXI. 


Nuptial Song in Honour of Junia and Man 






lius, .... 


79 


LXII. 


Nuptial Song, 


89 


LXIII. 


Atys, 


94 


LXIV. 


The Nuptials of Peleus and Thetis, 


IOI 


LXV. 


To Hortalus, 


130 


LXVI. 


Beronice's Hair, 


131 


LXVII. 


Dialogue between Catullus and a Door, 


135 


LXVIII. a 


Epistle to Manlius, . 


137 


LXVIII. 1 


\ To Allius, .... 


139 


LXIX. 


To Rufus, .... 


145 


LXX. 


On the Inconstancy of Woman's Love, 


145 


LXXI. 


To Virro, . 


146 


LXXII. 


To Lesbia, .... 


146 


LXXIII. 


On an Ingrate, 


147 


LXXIV. 


On Gellius, .... 


148 


LXXV. 


To Lesbia, .... 


148 


LXXVI. 


To Himself. — The Lover's Petition, 


149 


LXXVII. 


To Rufus, . . . 


150 


LXXVIII. 


On Gallus, . . . . 


151 


LXXIX. 


On Lesbius, . . . 


152 


LXXX. 


To Gellius, .... 


152 


LXXXI. 


To a Beauty, 


153 


LXXXII. 


To Quintius, . 


154 


LXXXIII. 


On the Husband of Lesbia, . 


154 


LXXXIV. 


On Arrius, . 


155 


LXXXV. 


On his Love — Two Versions, 


155, 156 


LXXXVI. 


Quintia and Lesbia Compared, 


156 


LXXXVII. 


To Lesbia (translated in lxxv.), 


157 


LXXXVIII. 


On Gellius, . 


157 


LXXXIX. 


On Gellius, . 


157 



xii CONTENTS. 






PAGE 


xc. On Gellius, .... 


• 158 


XCI. On Gellius, .... 


• 158 


xcn. On Lesbia, .... 


159 


xciii. On Caesar, .... 


*59 


xciv. On Mamurra, 


160 


xcv. On " Smyrna," a Poem by Cinna, . 


160 


xcvi. To Calvus, on the Death of Quintilia, 


161 


xcvu. On Aemilius, 


161 


xcviii. To Vettius, .... 


162 


xcix. The Kiss. — To a Beauty, 


. 163 


C On Coelius and Quintius, 


164 


CI. The Poet at his Brother's Grave — Two Ver 




sions, .... 


165 


CI I. To Cornelius, ... 


166 


cm. To Silo, .... 


167 


civ. On Lesbia, .... 


167 


cv. On Mamurra, 


167 


cvi. On an Auctioneer and a Pretty Girl, 


1 68 


evil. To Lesbia. — The Reconciliation, 


168 


cvin. On Cominius, 


169. 


cix. To Lesbia, .... 


169 


ex. To Aufilena, 


170 


cxi. To Aufilena, 


171 


cxn. To Naso, 


171 


cxin. To Cinna, . 


171 


cxiv. On Mamurra, . 


172 


cxv. On Mamurra, . . . . 


172 


cxvi. To Gellius, . 


173 



Excursus and Illustrative Notes, 



CATULLUS. 



LIFE OF CATULLUS. 



Ifpl^OME, during the first five centuries of her 
||m>pij existence, had nothing worthy of the name 
v ^^ ?\ f a poetical literature. The fanciful 



theory propounded by Perizonius, and energetically 
and plausibly defended by Niebuhr, Macaulay, 
and others, receives no support from the relics of 
antiquity. Rome had, doubtless, a rich legendary 
history, but it was mainly traditional ; and her re- 
cords probably owe more of their charm to the ima- 
ginative genius of Livy than to the ballads and 
poetic essays of early bards. The ritual hymns, 
Fescennine lays, Saturae, festal and funeral songs, 
which constituted the autochthonous literature of the 
country, were rude compositions in primitive and 
inartistic metres, and destitute alike of imagination 
and poetic fire. They even failed to excite any ad- 



LIFE OF CATULLUS. 



miration in the cultivated minds of immediately suc- 
ceeding generations. 

Ennius has written the character of his country- 
men in a single line — 

" Bellipotentes sunt magi' quam sapientipotentes." 

They were essentially a people of arms, not of 
arts; yet their warlike power was ultimately the 
means of bringing them under the refining influences 
of the literature inherited or possessed by the con- 
quered nations. The war with Pyrrhus, and the long 
siege of Tarentum, were the immediate causes that 
led to this great change in the national character. 

But the subtle genius of the Greek had long been 
insinuating itself into the southern states of Italy, 
and from these parts come the first writers who com- 
mand our attention. These writers stood in the 
position of aliens to Rome, and owed their culture 
not to her, but to Magna Graecia. They imbibed 
the philosophy of Greece ; they accepted her theo- 
gony ; they developed a closely imitative literature — 
a literature that even among themselves was judged 
by the Grecian standard, and esteemed in proportion 
to the accuracy and taste with which the writer re- 
produced the graces of the Grecian mind. To this 
period belong the names of Livius Andronicus, 
Naevius, Ennius, Plautus, Caecilius, Terence, Pacu- 
vius, Attius, and Lucilius. Livius Andronicus was a 



LIFE OF CATULLUS. 



Greek, and deserves notice here more from his having 
been the medium through which the Romans firs 
became acquainted, in their own tongue, with the 
works of his countrymen, than from any original power 
or merits of his own. 

Naevius, in his epic poem on the first Punic war, 
was the last of the Roman poets who employed the 
old Saturnian or native measure. 

Ennius produced an epic, Greek in type, but 
Roman in subject and spirit, that furnished matter 
for reproduction and imitation to all who afterwards 
essayed the same task. But, apart from their indebted- 
ness to Greek literature, these last two were men ot 
vigorous mind, and are in every way entitled to rank 
as great poets. Plautus, Caecilius, Terence, Pacuvius, 
andAttius — all born outside the boundaries of Latium, 
and deriving from foreign influences their culture and 
knowledge of the poetic art, were mainly employed 
in adapting to the Roman stage the works of the 
Greek dramatists." 

Lucilius alone was a Latin by birth ; but he was in 
an equal degree indebted to Greek literature. He 
has, however, the high merit of developing a distinct 
species of poetry. Formal satire had hitherto been 
unknown both to the Greeks and Romans. Among 
the former, satire had been confined to the comic 
drama ; indeed, among a people like the Greeks, of 
fine sensibilities, whose ideal of life naturally sought 



LIFE OF CATULLUS. 



visible representation in dramatic display, comedy 
would seem to have been the proper form of satiric 
composition. Among the latter, it sprung up in the 
primitive scenic medley, and partook more of the nature 
of low buffoonery and coarse scurrility than of the wit, 
verve, and caustic humour of the brilliant Attic comedy. 
It was next adapted to the Roman taste in the pieces 
which the above-mentioned writers had borrowed from 
Greek originals. But with the blunt, straightforward, 
. matter-of-fact Roman — the man of practicality, far 
excellence, — satire, in order to its complete development 
and intelligent appreciation, required to take the form 
of a direct empiric philosophy. It did so with Lucilius, 
and what was the consequence % Unlike the borrowed 
forms of literature, it had a vigorous youth, a vigorous 
manhood a vigorous age. The genius of comedy 
disappeared with Plautus, Terence, and Attius, and 
the productions of these writers were soon forced to 
give place to the beast-fights and man-fights of the 
amphitheatre and the games of the circus. The Epic 
of Ennius and the Epic of Virgil — themselves inferior 
to their model — were succeeded by feebler efforts. 
The original and profound speculations of Plato 
and Aristotle awoke no deeper echo in the Roman 
mind than the fine oratorical treatises of Cicero. 
Catullus and Horace were the only poets who 
worthily struck the ^Eolian lyre. It was different in 
the case of Satire. This native product of Roman 



LIFE OF CATULLUS. 



genius, strong, keen, Roman-like in Lucilius, attained 
unequalled perfection in Horace, and, as if catching 
fresh fire from the hell of Roman depravity, re- 
appeared long afterwards with unabated power and 
the despairing earnestness of righteous ire in the 
great satirist of the empire. 

After Lucilius, nearly half a century elapsed before 
another luminary appeared in the poetical horizon. 
The language, however, was becoming gradually 
moulded for the purposes of the artist ; conquered 
Greece had yielded up the poetry and philosophy 
of ages as an everlasting heritage to her barbarian 
conquerors; the Grecising tendency of past genera- 
tions was still on the increase, when two poets of 
rare genius appeared : Titus Lucretius Cams, the 
author of the noblest didactic poem of ancient or 
modern times, and Q. or C. Valerius Catullus. 1 

According to the Eusebian Chronicle, Catullus 

1 He is called Quintus by Pliny the Elder, {Nat. Hist, xxxvii. 
cap. 6,) and Caius by Appuleius, (in Apologia.) If reliance could 
be placed on Jos. Scaliger's reading of a very corrupt line, (Carm. 
lxvii. 12,) which he testifies to finding clearly written on the 
copy of James Cujas or Cujacius, a French jurist of the sixteenth 
century, Quintus is undoubtedly his praenomen. 

Scaliger's reading of the line is — 

" Verum istis populi naenia, Quinte, facit." 
Lachmann conjectures — 

" Verum istud populi fabula, Quinte, facit." 
We leave it to the reader to set what value he pleases on the 
readings of these two scholars. 



8 LIFE OF CATULLUS. 

was born b.c. 87, in the consulship of Cneius Octa- 
vius and Lucius Cornelius Cinna, and died at the age 
of thirty, b.c 57. The latter date is clearly incorrect, 
as one of his poems 1 plainly testifies that he was 
alive in the consulship of Vatinius, b.c 47. This 
fact is enough to throw doubt on the date there as- 
signed to his birth, and, indeed, when all the circum- 
stances are considered, we are led to the conclusion 
that the error in the one case is as great as in the 
other. 2 

The mistake of the chronicler may have arisen 
from the name of the consul, for it is extremely prob- 
able that he was born in the consulship of another 
Cneius Octavius, who held office with Marcus Scri- 
bonius Curio b.c. 76. Assuming this to be the case, 
there is no difficulty in believing that he died at the 
age of thirty, as there is nothing in his writings to 
show that he was living after B.C. 46. 

Catullus was born at Verona, 3 or in its immediate 
vicinity. Whether he belonged to a branch of the 
illustrious family of the Valerii it is impossible to say; 
but it is evident that his father must have been a person 

2 Many of the poems of Catullus were clearly written after 
B.C. 56, while only one can with certainty be dated before that 
year, viz., the 46th, which appears to have been written in 
B.C. 57. 

3 Ixvii. 34. Ov. Amor, in., EL xv. 7. Mart. i. 62 ; x. 103 ; xiy 

195. 



LIFE OF CATULLUS. 



of considerable position, as we learn from Suetonius 1 
that he was the friend and frequent entertainer of 
Julius Caesar. He probably remained in his native 
place till he assumed the toga virilis, which we can- 
not far err in supposing he did about the age of fifteen 
or sixteen. He then went to Rome, where, in all 
likelihood, for two years he led a gay and extravagant 
life. 2 His expenditure at this time would seem to 
have equalled, perhaps even exceeded, his income, 
if we are to put anything like a literal construction 
on his occasional outcries against poverty. 3 This we 
can hardly do, for about this time, or very shortly 
after it, a splendid villa at Sirmio, 4 if not, indeed, the 
whole peninsula, either by inheritance or by purchase, 
came into his possession. On the other hand, it 
must be admitted that such a banker as Silo, 5 and 
companions like Furius and Aurelius 6 — if they were 
really among the poet's acquaintances at this time 
— must have drawn heavily on even great re- 
sources. Whether on account of the unsatisfactory 
state of his finances, or from the desire to amass a 
fortune, he set out with a number of especial friends 
for Bithynia, in the suite of Memmius, 7 B.C. 58. The 
expedition, however, proved a complete failure, and 
tired of the service, and disgusted with the meanness 

1 Suet, in Julio, cap. J3. 2 Cf. lxviii. 1 6-1 8. 

3 Vide'xiu,, xxvi., &c. 4 xxxi. 5 ciii. 

6 xxi. 7 x. and xxviii. 



I O LIFE OF CA TULL US. 

and rapacity of his chief, he bade Bithynia and his 
companions farewell, and set out to visit the great 
Asiatic cities. 1 After completing his tour in the East 
he would seem to have had a yacht built expressly for 
himself at Amastris, 2 on the shores of the Euxine. 
In it he sailed to Italy, and up the Padus and its tri- 
butary, u the smooth-sliding Mincius," till he reached 
Lake Benacus, (Lago di Garda,) on the bosom 
of whose waters lay his villa and estate. 3 He 
probably returned to Italy in B.C. 56, and had cer- 
tainly settled down in Rome before the impeach- 
ment of Vatinius by Calvus, (b.c. 54,) for he tells us 
that he was present on the occasion, and in a short 
epigrammatic effusion he pays a humorous tribute to 
the talents of that distinguished orator. 4 

While Catullus had been seeking an El Dorado 
in the East, his dear companions, Verannius and 
Fabullus, had been doing the same in the West 
They had vainly tried the province of Spain in the 
company of Piso, 5 and returned shortly after 6 the arrival 
of Catullus in Italy, with no better success. This 
Piso is generally identified with Cn. Calpurnius Piso, 
who having taken part with Catiline in his first con- 
spiracy, b.c. 66, was hurried off to Spain as Quaestor, 
with Praetorian authority. This office, we learn from 
Sallust, (Cat. c. 19,) he did not long hold, having been 

1 xlvi. 2 iv. 3 xxxi. 

4 liii. 5 xxviii. 6 ix., xii., xxviiu 



LIFE OF CA TULLUS. 1 1 

slain while making a progress within his province. 
Now it is abundantly evident, from the poems cited 
above, that Verannius and Fabullus were in Spain 
after the return of Catullus. It is therefore certain 
that it must have been some other Piso who was 
praetor in Spain at this time. 1 

After the poet's return from Bithynia he met and 
deeply loved the beautiful and dissolute Lesbia. A 
statement of the evidence that has led us to the con- 
clusion that this was the period of his intimacy with 
that lady may not be inapposite. In the lines ad- 
dressed to Mamurra's mistress, (xliii.,) written evi- 
dently as much for the purpose of ridiculing Mamurra's 
extravagance as his sweetheart's ugliness, and which 
one cannot conceive as written prior to Caesar's occu- 
pancy of Gaul, (or what is the point in the words 
" decoctor" and " Provincia" X) she is said to be 
compared to his matchless Lesbia. But Caesar did 
not obtain the province of Gaul till B.C. 59, nor set 
out for it till B.C. 58. The third stanza of Carm. xi. 
points still more clearly to a period subsequent to 58 
as the time of his intimacy with Lesbia. 

We are told by Appuleius 2 that her real name was 
Clodia. From this circumstance most of the editors 



1 xlvii. and note thereto. 

2 Appuleius in Apologia. Without at all questioning the vera- 
city of Appuleius, it is but fair to state that he lived 200 years 
after Catullus. 



1 2 LIFE OF CA TULL US. 

of Catullus have rushed to the conclusion that she 
was the sister of the notorious Publius Clodius Pul- 
cher, and wife of Metellus Celer. This supposition, 
however, cannot consistently be entertained, as we 
learn from Catullus himself that her husband was 
living during their intimacy, 1 while we know that 
Metellus Celer died in b.c. 59, the year before 
Catullus set out for Bithynia. With many, too, it 
has been matter of astonishment that Cicero has 
been so highly eulogised by Catullus, 2 but this need 
not excite surprise, seeing that the poet's Lesbia could 
not have been the victim of his merciless attack. 

During the next few years Catullus resided occasion- 
ally at Verona, 3 Sirmio, 4 and his Tiburtine villa 5 — for 
in the neighbourhood of Tibur, like Horace, he had 
a charming little retreat — but principally in Rome. 6 
Many of his occasional poems to his friends, the 
beautiful address to Sirmio, perhaps his celebrated 
" Hymenaeus " in honour of Junia and Manlius, and 
his wildly-grand poem of " Atys," were written 
about this time. With regard to "Atys," it may 
be vain even to hazard a conjecture— it is so un- 
like everything else — but surely it is natural to sup- 
pose that the charming nuptial song, redolent of 
flowers and innocence and bliss, was written in the 
heyday of his own love. 

1 lxxxiii. 2 xlix. 3 xxxv. 

4 xxxi. 5 xliv. 6 lxviii. a 34. 



LIFE OF CA TULL US. 1 3 

Lesbia was now his all-absorbing attraction. He 
loves her to distraction. He leaves her, vowing that 
he will never again feel for her the thrill of passion, or 
the tender emotion of love. But it is only for a little 
while. Degraded though she be, he cannot leave her. 
She binds him fast with her silken fetters, and he 
becomes again her willing slave. Still she cannot be 
chaste \ and, sinking lower and lower, she disappears 
from our gaze, leaving the poet's heart bursting with 
sorrow, yet stirred with an unutterable emotion for the 
once loved object whom many a sad experience has 
now taught him to loathe. 1 

Soon after an event occurred which cast a gloom 
over all his after life — the death of a brother in the 
Troad. 2 Actuated by the holiest feelings of natural 
piety he made a pilgrimage to Asia Minor to 
visit his grave, and pay in a foreign land the last sad 
offices in accordance with the usage of his ancestors. 
After bidding his silent ashes an eternal farewell he 
returned once more to Rome, 3 and then retired to 
Verona, 4 for a time relinquishing even the society 
of valued friends, and denying himself the solace of 
the muse. 5 A promise, however, which he had made 
to his friend Hortalus, 6 to translate for him the 
" Hair of Berenice " from Callimachus, 7 calls from 
him an effusion accompanied by the poem in ques- 

1 lviii. 2 ci. 3 lxviii. a 34. 4 lxviii. a 27. 

5 lxv. and lxviii. 6 lxv. 7 lxvi. 



1 4 LIFE OF CATULLUS. 

tion ; but in this, and two subsequent pieces, 1 he 
strikes the lyre with a tenderer hand and a sadder 
heart. From the last of these, addressed to Allius, 
and numbered lxviii. 6 in our translation, we learn that 
the poet's possessions are still further enlarged, 
through that friend's liberality, by a gift of land, a 
house, and " an easier love " than Lesbia, " if not so 
fair." 2 

Catullus, deeply wounded though he may have 
been by the faithlessness of his earlier love, has still 
a heart, if not as passionately fond, far more firmly 
balanced, and equally alive to the joys of reciprocated 
affection. He has now, in great measure, thrown 
jealousy to the winds, a lesson that to a mind like 
his must have been hard to learn, and in the case of 
his present mistress he solaces himself in this wise : — 

' ' And though she may not live for me alone, 
Few are the falsehoods of my modest maid, 
Then let me bear them as to me unknown, 
Nor like a fool her broken faith parade." 3 

About this time would seem to have been written 
most of his bitter lampoons, evincing deep personal 
hate as well as utter detestation of the inhuman vices 
in the individuals whom he branded. Some of these 
could well have been spared, and the loss of them 

1 lxviii. a and lxviii. 6 2 lxviii. 6 27 and 28. 

» lxviii. 6 95-97, &c. 



LIFE OF CATULLUS. 1 5 

would have been great gain to the reputation of 
Catullus, inasmuch as they have left an indelible stain 
on the memory of one of the most gifted and guile- 
less of men. 

But to this time, too, the brief autumn of an early 
age, we are assuredly indebted for his grand heroic 
legend of " Peleus and Thetis." 1 Thoroughly im- 
bued with the spirit of the Grecian mind, and enabled 
from two voyages across the ^Egean to portray with 
Homeric precision the places and scenes coming 
within the range of his subject, he was no less ad- 
mirably qualified, by his own bitter experience, in- 
tensity of feeling, and passionate, sensuous nature, 
to delineate the perfidy of Theseus, the passion of 
Ariadne, the sweet, heaven-hued bliss of Peleus and 
Thetis. 

In his later years he witnessed the dying struggles 
of Roman liberty ; he saw the most notorious hypo- 
crites and villains exalted to the highest offices of 
state ; he saw Roman honour become a jest, and, as 
if the fire in the temple of Vesta were extinguished, 
the virtue of a Roman matron become an empty 
name. 

With his brother's death fresh in his memory, with 
such a state of society around him, and probably in 
failing health, 2 we can almost see him penning the 
ominous lines against Nonius and Vatinius, 3 in which 

1 lxiv. 2 Vide Carm. xxxviii. 3 liii. 



1 6 LIFE OF CATULLUS. 

he seems longing to kiss the hand that sooner or later 
must put a period alike to the most poignant of 
human sorrows and the most rapturous of human 
joys. 

With regard to his personal appearance, we know 
nothing. With regard to his parents and his earlier 
years, from his own pen, we know as little. Mythic 
story has not, as in the case of more fortunate 
sons of song, portrayed to us " the young Catullus " 
with bees swarming on his lips or as cherished by 
doves on the lonely mountain height, but verily the 
Muses might have bathed his temples with the dews 
of Helicon, and the laughing Loves rocked him to 
rest in rosy bowers of bliss. 

For he was a joint nursling of Eros and Erato — an 
amorous as well as an amatory poet. Of no one 
could it be said with more propriety, that over his 
heart was outspread " the bloom of young desire and 
purple light of love." Those wondrous echoes — the 
poems addressed to Lesbia — that have no parallel in 
the literature of any language, emphatically stamp 
him the poet of passion. Yet there is not one offen- 
sive expression in their whole composition. We wish 
that the same could be said of all his productions. 
Unfortunately this may not be, and though we de- 
plore the turpitude of many of his lines, yea, many in 
which we cannot claim for him the accorded privilege 
of the satirist, we are bound to attribute these 



LIFE OF CA TULL US. 1 7 

blemishes in great measure to a too frank and out- 
spoken disposition, and to the gross licence that was 
allowed alike to plebeian and patrician in his de- 
praved and dissolute age. It cannot, however, be 
said that these are the offspring of a low and grovel- 
ling nature, or that his moral character was worse than 
that of the greatest men of- his own time, or of the 
perioi immediately succeeding. 

Moreover, the same objections that are raised 
against him may be urged with equal force against 
almost every Roman poet. That the freedom of his 
verses was assailed even in his own day, and by those 
of perhaps looser morals than himself, is evident from 
the lines in defence of his amatory poems. 1 The 
claim which he there makes to purity of life, and 
which he elsewhere asserts with terrible earnestness, 2 
would tejid to show that he had not in his life 
trespassed beyond at least his own ideas of de- 
corum and morality. He admits that his verses 
are highly spiced in order that they may have a 
charm for January as well as May, 3 but he indig- 
nantly repels the imputation that his life is tainted 
and impure. 

Nor ought we to forget, and this should give some 
weight to his statement, that in the brightest period 
of our own poetic literature habitual impurity of ex- 
pression was as common as in any period of heathen 

1 xvi. 2 lxxvi. 3 xvi. 7, 10, 11. 

B 



LIFE OF CATULLUS. 



antiquity. The pages of our early dramatists are 
stained with expressions as objectionable, and the 
more unpardonable, in that they are the productions 
of a Christian age. Yet who would think of attach- 
ing to Shakspeare's life the impurity of some of his 
writings ] 

But by far the strongest argument in favour of 
Catullus seems to us to lie in his chivalrous, exalted, 
and high-toned appreciation of the female character. 
Lesbia is in his eyes the loveliest thing of earth — 
the glory of a summer sun — till she deservedly incurs 
his disfavour. Junia, the bride of his friend Manlius, 
is fair as the myrtle, 1 unrivalled as the, hyacinth, 2 
tender as the ivy 3 and the vine, 4 and modest as the 
blushing rose. 5 So, too, is Ariadne. 6 And what a 
beauty, and depth, and tenderness in his picture of 
the lovely and hapless Laodamia ! 7 No poet has 
paid a higher tribute to virtuous affection, or sung in 
tenderer tones the joys of wedded love. Nor is there 
anywhere else to be found a more unsparing denun- 
ciation of gross licentiousness and impious crimin- 
ality. Even the all-dreaded name of the Imperial 
Dictator cannot shield him from the fury of his fierce 
and relentless pen. 8 He is as much a foe to auto- 
cracy, on the one hand, as he is to democracy on 

1 lxi. 21 seqq. 2 lxi. 93. 3 lxi. 34, 35. 

4 lxi. 106 seqq. 5 lxi. 194, 195. 6 lxiv. 86-90. 

7 lxviii. 6 33 seqq. 8 xxix., liv., lvii. 



LIFE OF CATULLUS. 19 

the other, nor has he more sympathy with Pompey 
than with Caesar. 1 They are both in his estimation 
unscrupulous charlatans, bent on the ruin of the 
Roman name. Though his poems betray almost no 
political leanings, we easily see that he is at heart a 
leal old republican. Anything derogatory to Roman 
liberty or ancient prestige is met with a burst of fierce 
indignation or bitter scorn. Nor had he one jot 
more of sympathy with the hordes of vulgar aspirants 
for poetic honours, — the wretched poetasters of the 
age:— 

11 Saecli incommoda, pessimi poetae." 2 

Yet, singularly free from mean jealousy or malevo- 
lence, he was ever ready to extend the hand of 
fellowship, and to award the meed of approbation 
to his worthy brethren of the lyre. 3 While he was 
fastidious in literary matters, he was equally so as 
to the bearing and demeanour of those into whose 
company he was casually thrown. In short he had a 
hearty horror of bores of every description. 

The pretty, chattering minx of Varus ; 4 the urbane, 
polished, and witty Suffenus, 5 but who, alas ! was 
never so happy as when writing verses and reciting 
and admiring his wretched drivel; 6 the black-bearded, 
white-toothed fop Egnatius, 7 with his everlasting grin; 

1 xxix. 25. 2 xiv. 23. 3 xxxv., L, xcv 

4 x. 5 xiv. 19 and xxii. 6 xxii. 16. 

* 7 xxxvii. 19 and xxxix. passim. 



20 LIFE OF CATULLUS. 

the conceited lawyer Sextianus, 1 with his pestilential 
speech-book; the napkin-filching Murrucinus, 2 and the 
cockney Arrius, 3 alike come in for a share of his genial 
indignation. 

Catullus seems to have been fond of retirement ; 
and whether sojourning in the city or in one or 
other of his country residences, he kept quite aloof 
from the cares and bustle of public life, finding a 
purer enjoyment in the society of men of kindred 
tastes and studies. Of a generous and impulsive 
nature, sterling honour, an affectionate and con- 
fiding disposition, and a keen relish for innocent 
social enjoyment, he had many friends with whom he 
lived on terms of the greatest amity. 4 But he was 
painfully sensitive. The smallest slight ; an undue 
liberty taken with him or his ; nay, a single word in 
disparagement of himself or his friends, wounded 
him to the soul. And if his loves and friendships 
were strong and abiding, his hates were equally so. 
This his invectives against Caesar, Mamurra, Gellius, 
Vatinius, Vettius, and Cominius amply attest. He 

1 xliv. io seqq. 2 xii. 3 lxxxiv. 

4 Among his especial friends he reckoned Cornelius Nepos, 
the historian ; Licinius Calvus, orator and brother-poet ; Caeci- 
lius, the author of a< poem on Cybele ; Caius Helvidius Cinna, 
the author of " Smyrna/' and one of his companions in his 
Bithynian expedition; the versatile and accomplished genius 
Asinius Pollio, the poets Cornificins and Hortalus ; Cato, the 
litterateur ; Alphenus Varus, the lawyer; Manlius Torquatus, 
Verannius, Fabullus, and others. 



LIFE OF CA TULLUS. 2 1 

would seem never to have forgiven an injury, except 
the first faithlessness of Lesbia. 

The most trivial neglect or apparent forgetfulness 
of him hurt his feelings, and drew from his bosom 
bitter sighs of anguish. But in this respect he was 
equally careful not to wound the feelings of others. 
Even the temporary interruption of friendly inter- 
course, and the delay to fulfil a promise, caused 
by the death of a dearly-loved brother, must be ex- 
plained to Hortalus, lest he should deem him regard- 
less of his friendship, or careless in the discharge of 
a sacred duty. 1 

With a detailed notice ot his poems we do not 
mean here to occupy the reader. We would merely 
indicate the position which we conceive he holds 
among Roman poets, and the influence which he 
exercised over his immediate successors. 

Catullus was the first Roman lyric poet; at least 
the first who adapted successfully the ancient 
Greek measures to the Roman lyre. This fact dis- 
proves in some measure the unqualified claims of 
Horace : — 

" Dicar .... 

Princeps yEolium carmen ad Italos 
Deduxisse modos." 2 

" Parios ego primus iambos 
Ostendi Latio." 3 

1 lxv. 2 Hor. Od. iii. 30. 10-14. 3 Hor. Epist. i. xix. 23, 24. 



2 2 LIFE OF CA TULL US. 

But perhaps Horace, in the first of these instances, is 
alluding to the " Alcaic," which he was the first to 
introduce, and which became in his hands the vehicle 
for his noblest thoughts. That Catullus enjoyed great 
popularity in his own day is abundantly evident, both 
from the many high eulogies passed upon him by 
writers of antiquity and from the bitter sneer of his 
lyric rival — 

" Simius iste 
Nil praeter Calvum et doctus cantare Catullum." x 

However, that he is entitled to the superlative 
eulogium of Niebuhr, " that he was the greatest of 
all the Roman poets, if we except, perhaps, a few of 
the earlier ones/' is a verdict against which many will 
protest. Horace alone disputes with him the palm 
of lyric poetry. Without instituting an invidious com- 
parison, we would merely note the chief character- 
istics of both j and neither, we think, will lose by 
being placed in juxtaposition. 

Catullus had, more than any other Roman poet, 
passionate intensity of lyrical conception. Horace 
possessed " fancy, wit, and humour, in matchless 
combination." There is greater naturalness and more 
spontaneity in the former; but there is in the latter 
more graceful expression and far more artistic skill. 
Catullus seems to have written every line under the 

1 Hor. Sat. I. x. 18, 19. 



LIFE OF CATULLUS. 23 

influence of some uncontrollable impulse \ Horace 
with great diligence and care. The former was con- 
tent to imitate the Greek model as he found it \ the 
latter careful to give his imitations a distinctive char- 
acter by confining himself rigidly to severer rules and 
more in keeping with a severer tongue. 

Yet both, though professed imitators of the Greeks, 
are thoroughly Roman in spirit. They are, however, 
in the treatment of their subjects, and even in their 
modes of thought, essentially distinct, and each is un- 
approachable in his sphere. They are magis pares 
quam similes — the dawn and the sunset — the first and 
the last of Roman lyric poets. 

But it is not on his lyrical effusions alone that the 
fame of Catullus rests. Indeed his greatest produc- 
tions are outside the pale of lyric poetry. "Atys" 
has no rival in any language. The " Peleus and 
Thetis/' again, has passages of far higher epic sub- 
limity than any other Roman poem. Virgil has not 
attained the grandeur of the " Ariadne," in the famous 
episode of " Dido," nor the tender pathos of the part- 
ing of ^Egeus and Theseus in the interview between 
^Eneas and his sire on the downfall of Ilium. The 
description of the Bacchants 1 in the same poem, 
which has furnished Rubens with a subject for his 
great picture, has, perhaps, more life, freshness, and 

1 lxiv. 254-264. 



LIFE OF CATULLUS. 



originality than any other passage in Roman epic 
poetry. 

Yet, all this notwithstanding, Catullus has not pro- 
duced an epic. True, he has given evidence of pos- 
sessing higher epic power than any Roman poet 
with whom we are acquainted — nothing more. But 
the world looks to deeds alone ; and while we recog- 
nise a loftier power in Catullus, we are constrained 
to accord to Virgil the well-merited praise of being 
Rome's great epic poet. 

The merits of Catullus, therefore, do not rest on 
his excellence in one species of poetry; he has es- 
sayed many, and he is great in them all. Perhaps 
the highest tribute to his vast and varied abilities is 
to be found in the fact that none of his successors in 
the brilliant Augustan period were above imitating his 
finest passages. While this statement is amply borne 
out by the references hereafter cited, it is worth mention- 
ing that Ovid, to whom, perhaps more than to any other 
Roman writer after Catullus, the Muse was prodigal of 
her gifts, has no less than four times tried his strength 
on "Ariadne," once, at least, with singular success. 1 

To sum up briefly : Catullus had not the solemn , 
earnestness, the nobleness of purpose, the heroic 
grandeur of soul that characterised his great con- 
temporary Lucretius ; he had not the wit, humour, 
fancy, and finish of Horace; he had not the labo- 
1 Vide Excurs. to Carm., lxiv. 



LIFE OF CATULLUS. 25 

rious perseverance of Virgil ; nor was a mercurial 
nature like his, perhaps, capable of the sustained 
exertion and toilsome drudgery of a work like the 
"^Eneid;" but he has proved himself as great a 
master of the grand and stately hexameter, though 
his frequent spondaic endings may convey an im- 
pression of harshness to an ear habituated to the 
smoother cadence of Virgil. In his elegiac poems 
he does not uniformly exhibit the terseness and pa- 
thetic tenderness of Tibullus, the refined diction and 
sparkling ingenuity of Propertius, or the deservedly- 
admired bell-like recurrent chime of Ovid ; nor in his 
epigrams the piquant smartness and chiselled point 
of Martial, but in the real elements that constitute 
the poet he is without a rival. 

It is not the part of talent, however great, to pro- 
duce an " Atys" or an " Ariadne." It is the high pre- 
rogative of genius. 

The loss of his writings that have not reached us 
is, perhaps — we judge from their titles — of little im- 
portance; 1 and what he might have done had length 

1 It is certain that several of the poems of Catullus have 
perished. Verses on love charms, (De Incantamentis,) like those 
of Theocritus and Virgil, are mentioned by Pliny, and Ithy= 
phallic songs, similar to the fragment numbered xviii., by Ter- 
entianus Maurus. Nonius, Servius, and others also refer to 
passages or expressions not found in the extant writings of 
Catullus. The "Ciris," commonly printed with the works of 
Virgil, and the lovely poem "De Vere" or "Pervigilium 






26 LIFE OF CATULLUS. 

of days been vouchsafed to him, cannot affect his 
position now ; but what we do possess could ill have 
been spared from the literature of his country ; and 
the loss of his sprightly little volume {lepidum novum 
libelhim) 1 would not only have deprived us of some 
of the fairest flowers of ancient verse — the dukes 
Musarum foetus* which he loved to foster — but 
would have left us in almost total obscurity regard- 
ing one of the few great names that gave a new phase 
to Roman poetry, and shed a lustre over the decline 
of the Roman republic. 



Veneris," have been claimed for him by some critics. The 
former of these exhibits a strong resemblance both in expression 
and style to the " Peleus and Thetis," and is most probably the 
work of an imitator of Catullus and Lucretius. The "Vigil" 
bears unmistakable traces of a later hand. The " Phasma," a 
farce by the mimographer, Q. Lutatius Catullus or Catulus, 
and the ' ' Laureolus, " probably by Laberius or Naevius, have 
also been erroneously ascribed to him. 

1 i. I. 2 lxv. 3. 



TO CORNELIUS NEPOS. 



To what dear friend, say, shall I dedicate 

My smart new book, just trimm'd with pumice dry? 
To thee, Cornelius — for, in years gone by, 

Thou wast accustom' d my light lays to rate 

As something more than trifles — ay, and then, 
When thou, the sole Italian, daredst engage 
To paint in three small volumes every age, 

With learned, Jove ! and with laborious pen. 

Wherefore accept my tiny leaves, I pray, 

Such as they are, — and, Patron Goddess, give 
This boon : that still perennial they may live 

After a century has roll'd away. 



28 TO LESBIA'S SPARROW. 

II. 

TO LESBIA'S SPARROW. 

Sparrow ! my darling's joy ! 

With whom she 's wont to toy, 
With whom some warm breast-nestling-nook to fill ; 

And, to frolic combat firing 

Thee her finger-tip desiring, 
To provoke the pricking peckings of thy bill. 

What time my beauteous fair, 

My heart's own darling care, 
With some endearing sport would please her will, 

As a tiny consolation, 

Doting love's fond recreation, 
That her bosom's fretful smartings may be still. 

With thee, like her, to play, 

And drive sad cares away, 
Were dear to me, as to the nimble maid, 

Sung in storied legend olden, 

Was the mellow apple golden, 
That her long-engirdled bosom disarray'd. 






ON THE DEATH OF THE SPARROW. 29 

III. 
ON THE DEATH OF THE SPARROW. 

Ye Graces ! mourn, oh mourn ! 

Mourn, Cupids Venus-born ! 
And loveliest sons of earth, where'er ye are ! 

Dead is now my darling's sparrow — 

Sparrow of my "winsome marrow,'' 
Than her very eyes, oh ! dearer to her far. 

For 'twas a honey'd pet, 

And knew her well as yet 
A mother by her daughter e'er was known : 

Never from her bosom stray' d he, 

Hopping hither, thither play'd he, 
Ever piped and chirp'd his song to her alone. 

Now to that dreary bourn 

Whence none can e'er return, 
Poor little sparrow wings his weary flight ; 

Plague on you ! ye grimly-lowering 

Shades of Orcus, still devouring, 
All on earth that 's fair and beautiful and bright. 

Ye Ve ravislrd from my sight 

Her sparrow, her delight ! 
Oh ruthless deed of bale ! woe, woe is me ! 

Now thy death, poor little sparrow, 

Doth her heart with anguish harrow, 
And her swollen eyes are red with tears for thee. 



30 DEDICA TION OF HIS PINNA CE. 

IV. 
DEDICATION OF HIS PINNACE. 

That pinnace there, my friends, declares she was the 

fleetest vessel 
E'er cut the sea, and never fear'd with wind or wave 

to wrestle : 
Whatever the craft — by oar or sail impelled — she 

could outvie it ; 
And she avers the shore of threatening Adria can't 

deny it, 
Or yet the island Cyclades, or Rhodes renown'd in 

story, 
Or rugged Thrace, Propontis, or the Euxine wild and 

hoary, 
Where she — a pinnace now — was erst a leafy wood 

canorous, 
Whose vocal foliage often breathed sweet murmurings 

o'er Cytorus. 

Pontic Amastris ! and Cytorus with the boxtree 

green aye ! 
The pinnace says these things are known, and known 

to you have been aye ; 
For from her earliest days she stood your lofty brow 

adorning, 
First in your waters dipp'd her oars, and ocean's fury 

scorning, 



TO LESBIA. 3 1 



O'er many a wild sea bore her lord^ and saw him 

safely harboured ; 
Whether the wind fill'd fair both sheets, or larboard 

piped, or starboard, 
Nor e'er to shore-gods vowM a vow, if calm or gale 

had caught her, 
From farthest ocean till she reach'd this still lake's 

limpid water. 

These days are gone ! now quietly stow'd — old age 

her first disaster — 
She dedicates herself to you, twin Pollux and twin 

Castor. 



TO LESBIA. 

The while we live, to love let's give 
Each hour, my winsome dearie ! 

Hence, churlish rage of icy age ! 
Of love we '11 ne'er grow weary. 

Bright Phoebus dies, again to rise \ 
Returns life's brief light never ; 

When once 'tis gone, we slumber on 
For ever and for ever 



32 TO FLA VIUS. 



Then, charmer mine, with lip divine ! 

Give me a thousand kisses ; 
A hundred then, then hundreds ten, 

Then other hundred blisses. 

Lip thousands o'er, sip hundreds more 
With panting ardour breathing ; 

Fill to the brim love's cup, its rim 
With rosy blossoms wreathing. 

We '11 mix them then, lest to our ken 
Should come our store of blisses, 

Or envious wight should know, and blight 
So many honey' d kisses. 



VL 

TO FLAVIUS. 

Flavius ! unless your cherish'd flame 

Were graceless and ungainly, 
From me you could not keep her name, 

You ? d wish to tell me plainly • 
Some hackney d jade, I '11 take my oath upon it, 
Has crazed your head, and you're ashamed to own it. 

Your bed, ah ! vainly mute ! with flowers 
And Syrian unguents scented ; * 



TO LESBIA. 33 



Your cushion in the midnight hours, 

All here and there indented ; 
Its crazy frame— the ambling and the creaking- 
Reveal a tale, the truth too plainly speaking. 

While these are there, you 're mute in vain ; 

And why so lean, unless it 
Be true you 're with such follies ta'en ? 

Come — good or bad — confess it. 
You and your love — I wish in song to blaze you, 
And to the stars in sprightly verse to raise you. 



VII. 
TO LESBIA. 

Love ! when we a-kissing go, 

Dost thou ask what sum suffices % 

Tell the countless sands that strew 
Warm Cyrene, land of spices, 

'Tween Jove's shrine 'mid desert gloom, 

And old Battus' hallow'd tomb ; 

Count night's silent stars that spy 
Stolen joys of maid and lover ; 

Give me these, and then I '11 cry, 
Hold ! love's cup is flowing over : 

Curious eye a sum so vast 

Cannot count, nor ill tongue blast. 



34 ON LESBIAS INCONSTANCY. 

VIII. 

TO HIMSELF, ON LESBIA'S INCONSTANCY. 

Wretched Catullus ! cease to sigh and whine, 
And what has perish'd think no longer thine ; 
Once thou didst summer in a glorious sun ! 
When thou in raptures of delight didst run 
Where'er thy dear, thy peerless charmer roved ; 
Loved then as girl by thee shall ne'er be loved. 
Then many were the gamesome frolics play'd, 
Fond was the youth, and not unfond the maid ; 
Thine was a charmed life ! thy suns how fair ! 
She flies thee now — thy lot then bravely bear ; 
Pursue her not ; thy misery cease to feel ; 
And with determined mind thy courage steel. 

Maiden, farewell ! Catullus feels no more ; 
Nor will he ask thy love, denied before y 
. But thou, when ask'd by none, shalt mourn thy fate. 
False one ! alas ! what sorrows thee await % 
Who will now fondly by thy side recline % 
Or in whose eyes shalt thou in beauty shine % 
Who in thy heart will wake love's eager flame % 
Of what fond lover shalt thou boast the name % 
Whom shall thy kisses fire with bland delight? 
Whose lips shalt thou with panting ardour bite % 
Care not, Catullus ! cease to think — to feel — 
Endure with heart hard as the temper'd steel. 






ON THE MISTRESS OF VARUS. 35 



IX. 

TO VERANNIUS, ON HIS RETURN FROM 
SPAIN. 

Verannius ! of my friends before all others 

Though I could count three hundred thousand here/' 

Hast thou come home again, thy loving brothers 
And aged mother with thy smile to cheer % 

Thou hast. To me most blest of intimations, — 
I'll see thee safe, and hear thee telling o'er 

Strange tales of Spanish places, deeds, and nations, 
With all the accustom'd glee thou hadst of yore. 

I '11 clasp thy neck in tenderest embraces, 

I '11 fondly kiss thy pleasant mouth and eyne ; 

O ! all ye happiest of happy faces, 

Where is there joy or happiness like mine] 



X. 

ON THE MISTRESS OF VARUS. 

Friend Varus dragged me off his love to see, 
As I the Forum left quite free from duty \ 

A girl, as at a glance appear'd to me, 

Devoid of neither sprightliness nor beauty. 

* Or, if by millibus trecentis, 300,000 sesterces be meant — 

Verannius ! of my friends before all others ! 

Millions were nought compared with one so dear! 



36 ON THE MISTRESS OF VARUS. 

When we arrived, on various themes we fell, 

Discussed, ? mong others which the occasion offer'd, 

Bithynia — how things went there — and, as well, 
What heaps of wealth I there had safely corTer'd. 

u Nor I, nor captains, nor their train," I said, 
And spoke the truth, nor ever tried to cheat her, 

" Could now display a better scented head, 
Especially with such a knavish praetor 

As ours, who prized his cohort not one hair." 
" But surely, sir," thus the sly wanton prated, 

" You'd have some slaves to bear your litter there? 
Tis said the custom there originated." 

I to the wench a lucky dog to seem, 

Replied, " Oh, no ! my fate was not so bitter, 

That, bad although I did the province deem, 
I had not eight straight men to bear my litter." 

But neither here nor there, if truth be said, 
Was I of ev'n a single slave the holder, 

The broken foot of my old truckle-bed 

To hoist aloft and place upon his shoulder. 

Then she, like all her bland seductive train : 
" A little, dear Catullus, let me borrow 

Those fellows; I'd so like just to be ta'en 
To great Serapis' temple, say, to-morrow." 



i 



TO FURIUS A ND A URELIUS. 3 7 

" Pardon me, dearest girl; of what I said 

Was mine I 'd frankly been to you the donor ; 

But I was wrong • I fear you 've been misled — 
They 're Caius Cinna's — madam — he 's their owner. 

But, whether his or mine, what 's that to me i 
I use the fellows just as if I 'd bought 'em ; 

But you will so absurd and plaguy be, 

One cannot tell a hb but you have caught him." 



XI. 
TO FURIUS AND AURELIUS. 

THE FAREWELL MESSAGE TO LESBIA. 

O Furius and Aurelius ! comrades sweet ! 

Who to Ind's farthest shore with me would roam, 
Where the far-sounding Orient billows beat 

Their fury into foam ; 

Or to Hyrcania, balm-breath' d> Araby, 

The Sacian's or the quiver'd Parthian's land, 
Or where seven-mantled Nile's swolPn waters dye 
The sea with yellow sand ; 

Or cross the lofty Alpine fells, to view 

Great Caesar's trophied fields, the Gallic Rhine, 
The paint-smear' d Briton race, grim-visaged crew, 

Placed by earth's limit line : 



38 TO ASIN1US. 



To all prepared with me to brave the way, 

To dare whate'er the eternal gods decree — 
These few unwelcome words to her convey 

Who once was all to me. 

Still let her revel with her godless train, 

Still clasp her hundred slaves to passion's thrall, 
Still truly love not one, but ever drain 

The life-blood of them all. 

Nor let her more my once-fond passion heed, 

For by her faithlessness 'tis blighted now, 
Like floweret on the verge of grassy mead 

Crush' d by the passing plough. 



XII. 
TO ASINIUS. 

Asinius ! o'er the wine and 'mid the jesting, 
You with your left hand play a shameful part, 

Your careless friends of handkerchiefs divesting, 
Think you, poor silly fool ! that this is smart % 

You do not know how mean 'tis and ungallant ! 

Believest not 1 Ask your brother Pollio, who, 
If you 'd desist, would gladly give a talent ; 

And he 's in pleasantries surpass'd by few. 



i 



. TO FABULLUS. 39 

Wherefore expect no end of lashing satire, 
Or now at once my handkerchief resign : 

With me the intrinsic value's not the matter, 
But 'tis a keepsake from a friend of mine. 

Some time ago, Verannius and Fabullus 

Sent me some Saetab handkerchiefs from Spain ; 

Their gift it is but right their friend Catullus 
Should prize as dearly as the valued twain. 



XIII. 
TO FABULLUS, 

INVITATION TO DINNER. 

If the gods will, Fabullus mine, 

With me right heartily you ; 11 dine, 

Bring but good cheer — that chance is thine 

Some days hereafter ; 
Mind a fair girl, too, wit, and wine, 

And merry laughter. 

Bring these — you '11 feast on kingly fare — 
But bring them — for my purse — I swear 
The spiders have been weaving there ; 

But thee I J ll favour 
With a pure love, or, what 's more rare, 

More sweet of savour, 



40 TO LICINIUS CALVUS. 

An unguent I '11 before you lay 
The Loves and Graces t' other day 
Gave to my girl — smell it- — you '11 pray 

The gods, Fabullus, 
To make you turn all nose straightway. 

Yours aye, Catullus. 



XIV. 
TO LICINIUS CALVUS. 

At more even than my eyes did I not rate thee, 
Calvus ! most pleasant of all friends of mine, 

With even Vatinian hatred I would hate thee, 
For that most execrable gift of thine. 

What have I done % what word unguarded spoken? 

That thou should st plague me with such cursed 
trash * 
Heaven send that client many an angry token, 

Who sent thee such a store of balderdash ! 

If, as I 'm thinking, your pedantic neighbour 
Sulla sends you this present fresh and choice, 

I am not sorry that your valued labour 
Is thus rewarded, nay, I do rejoice. 



i 



TO AURELIUS. 4 1 



Great gods ! the volume I have now before me 
You 've sent your friend — Oh ! horrid, cursed lays ! 

That all day long the hated sight might bore me 
Upon the Saturnalia, best of days. 

No, my fine wag ! you '11 not get off so easy, 
For with the dawn I '11 to the bookstalls hie, 

Rifle each nook and shelf — the Aquinii, Caesi, 
SufTenus, all such poison dire I '11 buy, 

And with these tortures back again I '11 pay you. 

Hence, then, vile trash ! hence, fare-ye-well the 
while ! 
Begone ! your cursed steps retrace, I pray you, 

Scum of the age ! bards vilest of the vile ! 



XV. 
TO AURELIUS. 

My love I to thy care commend, 

I ask this modest favour ; 
If e'er thou hadst a darling friend, 

And yearn'dst from shame to save her, 

O ! tend this girl with tenderest care, 

I 'm easy altogether 
'Bout those who throng the thoroughfare 

And hurry hither, thither \ 



42 TO AURELIUS AND FURIUS. 

But 'tis thyself — thy wiles I fear, 
Each maiden's fame destroying ; 

So, to some other market steer, 
If needs thou must be toying ; 

' For, if I find thy lustful heart 
Has led thee to misuse her, 
I swear thou ; lt from the torments smart 
Reserved for the seducer. 



XVI. 

TO AURELIUS AND FURIUS. 

Base Furius and Aurelius ! hence, away ! 

Who think that I 'm unchaste because my verses 
Breathe tales of tender love and harmless play; 
Chaste should the modest bard himself be aye. 

Not so the amorous themes his muse rehearses. 

'Tis when his lines with tender fervour flow, 

And thrill the soul like an inspiring potion, 
That they possess the genuine spice and glow, 
Firing not youth alone, but age, whose slow 
And frozen limbs are well-nigh reft of motion. 

Because ye Ve read some lay of mine of late, 
Wherein I sang of many thousand kisses, 



TO A CERTAIN TOWN. 43 

Ye think me wanton and effeminate. 
Avaunt ! or yours will be a dreadful fate, 
The poet's lash is one that seldom misses. 



XVII. 

TO A CERTAIN TOWN. 

(Rendered into English after the original verse.) 

Town ! O Town, that desirest on thy long bridge to 

exhibit 
Sports, and yearnest to trip in the dance, but fear'st 

the weak timber 
Props of thy little rickety bridge, lest, falling supinely 
Past remead, it should lie overwhelmed in quagmire 

abysmal, 
So to thee be a capital bridge — the dream of thy 

fancy- 
One on which may be ventured the rites of Salian 

dancers. 
Then, O Town ! to me grant this rare boon of mer- 
riest laughter : 
List, a townsman of mine, I wash from thy bridge I 

could headlong 
Hurl, and duck in the marsh below, heels o'er head 

in its waters, 
Ay ! and there, where, of all the abyss and dark slimy 

cesspool, 



44 TO A CERTAIN TOWN. 

Yawns the sink of corruption by far the blackest and 

deepest. 
Oh ! but he is an ass, nor as wise as two-year-old 

infant, 
Hush'd and rock'd to repose on the trembling arm 

of his father, 
Mated, too, with a beauteous girl— sweet flower in 

her springtide, 
Tenderer far than the tenderest youngling kid of the 

meadows, 
Needing warier 'tendance than lush-black grapes on 

the vine-branch : 
Yet he leaves her to romp as she will, not one straw 

he careth, 
Ne'er bestirs he himself in the least, but lies like an 

alder, 
FelFd by tree-lopper's axe in a ditch, of woody Ligu- 

ria, 
Wholly blind and obtuse as if she were nothing or 

nowhere. 
Such a dolt is this townsman of mine, he sees not, he 

hears not. 
Sooth ! he knoweth not whether he is or really is not. 
Now I wish from the top of thy bridge to pitch him 

head-foremost, 
Just to find out if suddenly one might rouse the dull 

num scull, 
And leave fast in the glutinous mire his spirit insen- 
sate, 
Even as leaveth the hinny its iron shoe in the gutter. 



THE GARDEN GOD. 45 



XVIII. 

TO THE GARDEN GOD. 

To thee this grove I dedicate and consecrate, Priapus. 
Who hast thy shrine and shady wood at Lampsacus, 

Priapus, 
For chiefly in its towns the Hellespont thy glory 

soundeth, 
Than which no other shelly shore in oysters more 

aboundeth. 



XIX. 

THE GARDEN GOD. 

My lads ! this farm, this cottage by the mead, 

Thatched with the willow-wand and rushy reed, 

I, a dry oak, by rude axe shapen, cheer 

With blessings richer each returning year. 

The poor cot's owner and his little boy 

Revere and hail me as their god with joy, 

The sire with constant diligence proceeds 

To clear my fane of rough and prickly weeds, 

The son with anxious care large gifts bestows — 

From his small hand the offering ever flows. 

Spring's firstlings on my fane are duly laid, 

The flower-streak'd wreath, soft ear, and tender blade ; 

Posies of yellow violets are mine ; 



46 THE GARDEN QOD. 

The saffron poppy decorates my shrine ; 

The fragrant apple and the pale-green gourd ; 

And lush-red grapes 'neath shady leaves matured. 

Oft — breathe it not — upon my fane has bled 

The bearded goat, or horn-hoof d spouse instead ; 

For all these gifts is not Priapus bound 

To watch his master's vines and garden groundi 

Then hence, my lads ! keep off your thievish hands, 

Our nearest neighbour there is rich in lands ; 

And his Priapus has a careless air, 

Go, take from him. This path will lead you there. 



XX. 
THE GARDEN GOD. 

I, traveller, a dry poplar rudely wrought, 
Guard on the left this little plot of land, 

Its humble owner's garden and his cot, 
And keep away the thief's rapacious hand. 

Spring round my brow a flowery garland twines ; 

Summer the ear embrown'd by Phoebus' power; 
Autumn the verdant lush-grape-cluster'd vine; 

The olive pale is icy winter's dower. 

The tender goat within my pastures fed, 
Her well-fill'd udder bears to yonder town; 

The fatted lambkin from my sheepfolds led, 
With heavy gold the cotter's care doth crown. 



TO A URELIUS. 47 



The gentle calf, while lows its mother here, 
Stains with its blood the fane of deity : 

Then, traveller, this god thou shalt revere, 

And keep thy hands aloof; 'twere well for thee ; 

For I 've a weapon here might do thee harm. 

Come on, you say, I'd like to see you try; 
Lo ! here the cotter comes, whose sturdy arm 

Can wield the club I '11 readily supply. 



XXL 

TO AURELIUS. 

Aurelius ! bleak starvation's sire, 

In present, past, or future day, 
And thou, inflamed by foul desire, 

Wouldst wean my love away ! 

Nor secretly : for soon as e'er 

Thou ; rt with her, thou beginn'st to smile, 
To jest, caress her, and ensnare 

Her heart with every wile. 

In vain : I '11 to the world proclaim 
Thy faithless and insidious ways, 
If thou shouldst dare her spotless fame 
To sully and debase. 



48 TO VARUS. 



If thou in pamper'd ease and state 

Didst this, I then might silent be ; 
But, oh ! I mourn my darling's fate, 

To starve and thirst with thee. 

Then cease, whilst still thou canst command 

A modest and unsullied name, 
Or thou shalt wear the ignoble brand 
Of perfidy and shame. 



XXII. 

TO VARUS. 

Varus ! that youth Suffenus whom you know 

Is quite a clever and accomplish'd beau — 

Can pleasantly on any theme converse, 

Is witty, too, and writes no end of verse. 

I verily believe he 's written o'er 

A round ten thousand lines perhaps, or more ; 

Not done, as usual, on palimpsest, 

No, but on royal paper, and the best, 

New boards, new bosses, bands of richest red, 

The sheets with pumice smooth'd and ruled with lead. 

When these you read, the beau, the wit is dead ; 

A goatherd or a ditcher 's left instead; 

Such is the difference — so vast the change ! 

How then explain a thing so very strange % 

The man whom now the prince of wits we see, 

Or glibber still, if aught more glib there be, 



TO FURIUS. 49 



Becomes more boorish than a boorish clown 

Whene'er to poesy he settles down ; 

What 's more, he never half so happy seems 

As when he 's writing his poetic themes ; 

His joy unbounded tongue could ne'er express, 

He so admires his wondrous cleverness. 

Doubtless we 're all mistaken so — 'tis true, 

Each is in something a SufTenus too : 

Our neighbour's failing on his back is shown, 

But we don't see the wallet on our own. 



XXIII. 
TO FURIUS. 

Furius ! of neither slave nor chest, 

Nor spider, bug, or fire possest, 

A sire and step-dame thine alone, 

Whose teeth can masticate the stone. 

Fair is thy lot in such a house, 

With him and with his wooden spouse ! 

No w r onder : health your days doth cheer, 

Ye Ve good digestion, nought to fear, 

No fire, nor baleful ruins there, 

No impious deeds, nor poison's snare, 

Mishaps and dangers both ye scorn, 

Ye 've bodies drier far than horn, 

Or aught, if aught more dry there be, 

From heat, or cold, or poverty, 

Why not live well and happily ? 



50 TO THALLUS. 



From thee no sweat or spittle flows, 
Mucus or moisture from your nose ; 
In fine, a match for thee, I ween, 
In cleanliness was never seen. 
A life with boons so precious fraught, 
Oh ! ne'er- despise nor rate at naught ; 
For money never breathe a prayer, 
For you of blessings have your share. 



XXIV. 
TO A BEAUTY. 

loveliest flow'ret ! Beauty's peerless queen 
In this our age, or that the past hath seen, 
Or that shall blossom in an after day ! 

1 'd rather thou hadst thrown my all away 

On that low wretch, who has nor slave nor chest, 

Than let thyself be thus by him caress'd. 

" How % is he not a beau ?" you '11 say. — He 's so;. 

But neither slave nor purse has this fine beau. 

My counsel, if you will, reject, disdain : 

He has nor slave nor chest I still maintain. 



XXV. 

TO THALLUS. 

Base Thallus ! softer far than rabbit's hair, 
Than goose's marrow, or than tip of ear, 
Than flabby feeble age, or spider's airy snare. 



TO FURIUS. 5 I 



Yet thou, the self-same Thallus, art even more 
Rapacious than the driving storm, whose roar 
Scares wild on fluttering wing the gape-mouth'd birds 
ashore. 

Send back my cloak and Saetab kerchief, pray,- 

And Thynian tablets thou hast filclVd away, 

Which thou, like heirlooms, fool ! dost openly display. 

Unglue them from thy nails and give them back, 
Lest the dread lash should scar with smarting crack 
Thy back and tender flanks with many an ugly track, 

And thou shouldst toss and boil excessively, 
Like tiny craft caught in the mighty sea 
When round the wild winds rave with mad tempes- 
tuous glee. 



XXVI. 

TO FURIUS. 

Furius ! my villa is not set, I find, 
Against the north, south, west, or eastern wind ; 
But O ! a wind more dread, more baleful still, 
A fifteen tho usand, ten score sesterce bill ! 



52 TO HIS CUPBEARER. 

XXVII. 

TO HIS CUPBEARER. 

Young server of the old Falernian wine ! 
Pour drier liquor in this cup of mine ; 
Postumia rules our festive board to-night — 
7 Tis her command — be it observed aright ; 
And, sooth, she likes the purple juice more strong 
Than ever drunken grape-seed lay among. 
Then, cooling waters ! hence where'er ye please, 
Hence ! bane of wine, to spoil my beaker cease, 
Go, seek a while the sober and severe : 
The pure Thyonian only sparkles here. 



XXVII. 

TO HIS CUPBEARER. 

(another version.) 

Young server of old Falern ! ho ! 

Pour drier cups for me, 
Our queen Postumia wills it so, 

Be sacred her decree. 

For as the tipsy grape-stone sips 
The juice that round it rolls, 

So revel gay Postumia's lips 
In nectar-brimming bowls. 



TO VERA NX I US AND FABULLUS. 53 

Then, water, hence where'er ye will, 

Thou bane of rosy wine ! 
Go, seek the sober : here we swill 

Thyonian juice divine. 



XXVIII. 
TO VERANNIUS AND FABULLUS. 

Piso's suite ! come, tell Catullus, 
You with knapsacks neat and light, 

Dear Verannius and Fabullus, 
Has your business gone all right ? 

Have you with that famine-monger 

Borne enough of cold and hunger ? 

What in shape of gains expended 
Show your ledgers in the gross % 

While my praetor I attended, 
I — I tell you — gain'd a loss. 

Memmius ! ah ! you rogued me finely, 

Screwed me — held me down supinely. 

But, as far as I can judge on 

This point, you were much the same ; 
No whit better your curmudgeon ; 

Cringe to friends of noble name ! 
Heaven send ills without cessation 
On such miscreants of the nation ! 



54 ON MAMURRA, TO CAESAR. 

XXIX. 
ON MAMURRA, ADDRESSED TO CAESAR. 

Who can see it ? who can bear it ? 

But a rake and gamester vile, 
That Mamurra should inherit 

Gaul and distant Britain's isle 1 
Wilt thou see and bear the while ? 
Caesar ! rake ! leech ! gamester vile ! 

Shall that proud and pamper' d minion 

To the beds of all repair, 
Like the dove of snowy pinion, 

Or Adonis young and fair 1 
Wilt thou see and bear the while ? 
Caesar ! rake ! leech ! gamester vile ! 

Didst thou seek, unique commander ! 

That far island of the west, 
But to glut that batter'd pander ? 

"What is all he spends at best?" 
Cries your ill-placed bounty, " Hey ! 
'Tis a trifle" — is't then, pray? 

First his father's hoards devouring, 
Then the plunder Pontus gave, 

Then the wealth that Spain sent showering 
From the Tagus' golden wave. 

Now his dreaded name appals 

Both the Britons and the Gauls. 



TO A LP HEN US. 55 

Why then nurse this odious creature ? 

What to you can he avail 
But to sponge you and to eat your 

Fat possessions tooth and nail ] 
Drain'd ye all to glut his maw, 
Sire-in-law and son-in-law ! 



XXX. 
TO ALPHENUS. 

Alphenus ! faithless to thy trust ! false to thy com- 
rades leal ! 

Dost thou for thy fond friend, hard-hearted one ! no 
- sorrow feel % 

To wrong and to betray me, wretch ! each chance 
thou 'rt ^quick to seize, 

Yet false men's impious deeds will ne'er the blest im- 
mortals please. 

But this thou sett'st at nought and leav'st me wretched, 

whelm'd in woes \ 
Alas! what. now can mortals do? in what man faith 

repose % 
Surely thou badest me yield my soul, perfidious one ! 

to thee, 
Leading me into love, as if all things were safe to 

me ; 



56 TO THE PENINSULA OF SIRMIO. 

Now thou forsak'st me, and thy words and actions all 
are given 

An empty offering to the winds and airy blasts of 
heaven ; 

If thou forgett'st, not so the gods, — yea, Faith remem- 
bers too, 

Who ; 11 make thee in an after day thy shameful con- 
duct rue. 



XXXI. 



TO THE PENINSULA OF SIRMIO, ON HIS 
RETURN TO HIS VILLA THERE. 

Of all peninsulas and isles, 

Set in clear lake or sea, 
By twin-realm'd Neptune girt with smiles, 

The eye must Sirmio be ! 

As, joyful, on thy shore I stand, 

I scarce can think I 'm free 
From Thynia and Bithynia's land, 

And gazing safe on thee. 

Oh ! what more blessed than to find 

Release from all our cares ! 
When layeth down the weary mind 

The burden that it bears : 



TO IP SI THILL A. 57 

When, all our toil of travel o'er, 

Our hearth again we tread, 
And lay us down in peace once more 

On the long-wish'd-for bed. 

Prize for a world of labours meet, 

Worth all the weary while ! 
Be glad, sweet Sirmio ! and greet 

Thy master with a smile. 

Laugh, all ye Lydian waves, I come ! 

Your joy my herald be ! 
And send the rippling welcome home, 

That all may laugh with me. 



XXXII. 
TO IPSITHILLA. 

My heart's delight, my darling sprite, 

Sweet Ipsithilla ! prithee, 
Command that I to thee may hie, 

To pass the noontide with thee. 

And if by thee I ; m bid, then see 
Thy door unbarred be, love ! 

Nor wish to roam away from home, 
But stay and gladden me, love ! 



ON THE VIBENNIL 



Caresses rare for me prepare, 

Be three times three the number ; 

For here alone, I yearn, mine own, 
To clasp thee ere I slumber. 

Now luncheon 's o'er, delay no more, 
Say come, and I shall fill a 

Deep goblet rare to thee, my fair, 
My charming Ipsithilla. 



XXXIII. 

ON THE VIBENNIL 

Of all the smart thieves at the baths, there 's not one, 
Vibennius, like thee — none so base as thy son ! 
The father far-famed for his thievish right hand ! 
The son the most infamous scamp in the land ! 
Then why not at once to the mischief be gone? 
Your thefts to the people are very well known ; 
And your son is so thoroughly steep'd in disgrace, 
No man will employ him who looks at his face. 



HYMN TO DIANA. 59 



XXXIV. 

HYMN TO DIANA. 

We share Diana's guardian care. 

Maidens and youths, a spotless throng ! 
We, spotless youths and maidens fair, 

Her praises raise in song. 

O mighty child of mightiest Jove ! 

Thee, great Diana ! we adore, 
Whom, near the Delian olive-grove, 

The fair Latona bore, 

That thou shouldst be the Virgin Queen 

Of mountain and of verdant wood, 
Of the sequestered valley green, 

And river's roaring flood. 

In woman's hour of travail, thou 

Art hail'd Lucina in her prayers ; 
Trivia ; and Luna when thy brow 

A borrow'd splendour wears. 

In monthly periods, Goddess ! still 
The rolling year thou dost allot, 
And with a bounteous hand dost fill 

The peasant's humble cot. 



60 TO CAECILIUS. 

Whatever name by thee is held 
Most sacred, be it ever thine ! 
And guard, as in the years of eld, 

Rome and her ancient line. 






XXXV. 
TO CAECILIUS. 

Paper ! to my friend Caecilius, 

Tender bard, this message take, 
Bid him for a while New Como 

And the Larian shore forsake. 
Bid him hasten to Verona, 

Say I 've sdmething in his line, 
That he '11 hear some cogitations 

Of a friend of his and mine. 

Wherefore, if he 's wise, he '11 hurry 

Over hill and thorough glen, 
Though his charmer fair a thousand 

Times should call him back again, 
And, around his neck entwining 

Both her arms, implore delay, 
For 'tis said she for him yearneth 

With a desperate love alway. 

Since he read to her his legend 
Of the Dindymenian dame, 



ON THE ANNALS OF VOLUSIUS. 6 1 

Through the poor child's inmost marrow 

Burnetii love's consuming flame. 
I forgive thee, maid more learned 

Than the Sapphic muse of old, 
For in lovely strains Caecilius 

Hath the mighty Dame extolled. 



XXXVI. 
ON THE ANNALS OF VOLUSIUS. 

Lays Volusian ! lays most stupid ! 

For my charmer pay a vow — 
For to Venus blest and Cupid 

She has vow'd if I should now 
Just — renewing love's fond plightings — 

Cease my harsh iambic line, 
She 'd the vilest bard's choice writings 

To the limping god consign, 
To be burnt with logs unlucky ; 

And my pretty charmer sees 
That her vow, so smart and plucky, 

Can be paid with none but these. 

Sea-sprung Queen who oft hast eyed us, 
Haunting blest Idalia's grounds, 

Syria's plains, Ancona, Cnidus, 
Where the waving reed abounds, 



62 TO FREQUENTERS OF A TA VERN. 

Amathus and Golgos ; — Lady 

Of Dyrrachium, Adria's mart ! 
Oh, accept the vow she 's made ye, 

If it 's pretty, if it 's smart. 
Hence among the embers ! shrivel, 

Smoke and smoulder there the while, 
Heap of boorishness and drivel, 

Lays Volusian ! paper vile ! 



XXXVII. 



TO THE FREQUENTERS OF A CERTAIN 
TAVERN. 

Ye loose frequenters of that drinking den, 

Ninth sign-post from the egg-capp'd brothers' shrine, 

And do ye think that ye alone are men, 

And have, to kiss the girls* a right divine ? 

Or think ye, fools, because ye loiter there, 

A hundred, or belike two hundred strong, 

That I, though single-handed, will not dare 

To thrash the whole two hundred ? then ye ; re wrong ; 

Think well on't ; for each sot to shame I '11 damn 

Upon the sign-board in an epigram. 

For my own darling who my bosom fled — 

Loved as no girl shall e'er be loved by me, 

For whom in many a battle fierce I 've bled — 

Is housed in that low den of infamy. 



TO C0RNIF1CIUS. 63 

Ye all caress her, happy souls and blest ! 

Oh ! 'tis too bad — sneaks, scoundrels every one ; — 

And thou the chief, Egnatius, flowing-tress'd, 

The rabbit-warren'd Celtiberia's son, 

Whose only merit 's that dark beard of thine, 

And teeth well-scrubbed with filthy Spanish brine. 



XXXVIII. 
TO CORNIFICIUS. 

Cornificius ! ills and woes 
Upon thy friend Catullus press ; 

And daily, hourly, deeper grows 

The gloom of his distress. 

What word of comfort hast thou brought % — 
A task how easy and how light ! — 

1 feel indignant at the thought 

That thou thy friend wouldst slight. 

Oh ! dost thou thus my love repay ? 

One strain my aching heart might ease, 
Though sadder than the tearful lay 
Of sad Simonides. 



64 ON EGNA TIUS. 



XXXIX. 
ON EGNATIUS. 

Because Egnatius' teeth are white and clear, 

He grins always : if pleader draw the tear 

When at the bar a criminal's arraign'd, 

He grins : if at the pile, with grief unfeign'd, 

Reft mother wails her darling only son, 

He grins : whate'er the time or place, all one, 

He grins : 'tis a disease with him I feel, 

Inelegant, I think, and ungenteel. 

Then I must warn thee, good Egnatius mine, 

Wert thou a Roman, Sabine, Tiburtine, 

A frugal Umbrian, fat Etrurian, 

Swart, huge-tooth'd Lanuvine, or Transpadan — 

Like me — or from a land where people dwell 

Who wash their teeth with water from the well, 

I 'd say renounce thy ceaseless idiot grin, , 

A silly laugh is folly, if not sin. 

Thou 'rt Celtiberian : in thy land they say 

Each one with a queer lotion, every day, 

As regularly as the morning comes, 

Is wont to scrub his teeth and russet gums ; 

Therefore, the more your teeth like ivory shine, 

The clearer 'tis you 've swill'd the odious brine. 



i 



ON THE MISTRESS OF FORMIANUS. 65 

XL. 
TO RAVIDUS. 

Ravidus ! wretch ! what dark infatuation 

Makes thee fall foul of my iambic lay ? 
What god at thy unholy invocation 

Prepares to kindle up the frantic fray? 
Wouldst be a theme of gossip for the rabble 1 

Wouldst thou be famed on any terms ? Thou 'It be : 
Since with my love of love thou ? st dared to gabble, 

Even at the risk of lasting infamy. 



XLI. 
ON THE MISTRESS OF FORMIANUS. 

Ah me ! and did I hear aright ? 

Whole sixty pounds did she propose ? 

That damsel with the hideous nose, 
Spendthrift Mamurra's heart's delight. 

Neighbours who for her welfare care 
Her friends and doctors hither call ; 
The wench is mad, nor thinks at all, 

Or thinks her brazen face is fair.* 

Or, according to the text of Schwabe — 

The wench is mad : don't ask at all 
What like she is : she 's mad, I '11 swear. 

E 



66 ON A CERTAIN FEMALE. 

XLII. 
ON A CERTAIN FEMALE. 

Hendecasyllabics ! haste 

Hither all ; an ugly hack 
Thinks to make of me a jest — 

Will not give your tablets back ; 
If ye can, wield satire's blade, 
Come ! pursue and dun the jade. 

Ask ye who she is 1 'tis she 

Strutting there with sluttish jog, 

Sillily, disgustingly, 

Grinning like a Gallic dog. 

Fence her round, wield satire's blade : 

" Give them back, you ugly jade." 

Car st thou nought, O dirt ! O slough ! 

Baser if aught baser be, 
This ye must not think enough : 

If ye Ve nothing more — let 's see — 
Surely we a blush can raise 
On the gipsy's brazen face. 

Shout with louder voice again, 

" Give them back, most vile of queans." 

Nought she 's moved — 'tis all in vain : 

You must change the mode and means ; 
Try, if more can yet be said, 
"Give them back, chaste, modest maid." 



TO HIS FARM. 67 



XLIIL 

ON THE MISTRESS OF FORMIANU& 

Hail, maiden ! with nor little nose, 
Nor pretty foot, nor jet-black eye, 
Nor fingers long, nor mouth e'er dry, 

Nor tongue whence pleasing prattle flows. 

You spendthrift Formian's heart engage ; 
And doth the province call you fair, 
And Lesbia's charms with yours compare? 

O witless and O boorish as:e ! 



XLIV. 
TO HIS FARM. 

My villa ! whether call'd by Sabine or Tiburtine 
name, 

For those who hold Catullus dear right sturdily de- 
claim 

That thou art on Tiburtine ground, but those who 'd 
wound his heart 

Contend, on any terms, that thou a Sabine villa art ; 

But really whether Tiburtine or Sabine, matters not, 

Right gladly did I find myself in thy suburban cot, 

And from my chest spat out a grievous cough — not 
undeserved — 

My stomach gave me waiting for a sumptuous dinner 
served. 



68 ON ACME AND SEPTIMIUS. 

For while I was at Sestius' house, at dinner by desire, 

He read me an oration full of plague and poison dire, 

That he had made against some claimant — Antius 
was his name — 

Then a cold fit and frequent cough shook all my 
shivering frame, 

Until I to thy bosom fled immediate, nothing loth, 

And wholly cured myself again with rest and nettle- 
broth. 

Wherefore, to health restored, I give sincerest thanks 
to thee, 

Because in mercy thou hast not avenged my sins on 
me; 

Nor would I greatly grieve, if I should hear his trash 
again, 

To see him in a shivering fit, and coughing might 
and main. 

But not on me — on Sestius let them fall for his mis- 
deed, 

Who ne'er invites me but when he has some vile trash 
to read. 



XLV. 
ON ACME AND SEPTIMIUS. 

Septimius clasp'd unto his breast 
His Acme — his delight — 

" My Acme," he the maid address'd, 
And thus his faith did plight : 



ON ACME AND SEP TIM I US, 69 

" If mine be not a desperate love, 
That through all after years will prove 
Unchanged, unchuTd while life remains, 
May I alone on Lybia's plains, 
Or scorching India's arid land, 
Before the green-eyed lion stand.'' 
To hear him, Love, as ever, pleased, 
From left to right approval sneezed. 

His Acme then, in loving guise, 

Back gently bent her head, 
Kiss'd her sweet boy's love-drunken eyes 

With rosy lip, and said : 
" So, Septimillus ! life ! mine own ! 
Be ever thou my lord alone, 
And mine the more, as still more dire 
In my soft marrow burns love's fire." 

To hear her, Love, as ever, pleased, 

From left to right approval sneezed. 

With mutual love beloved, the pair 
Start on life's path with omens fair, 
The love-sick youth prefers her smile 
To Syria's realms and Britain's isle ; 
In him alone his Acme true 
Finds joys and pleasures ever new. 
Who e'er hath seen, the world around, 
A love with happier auspice crown'd ? 



70 TO PORCIUS AND SOCRA TION. 



XLVI. 

TO HIMSELF, ON THE RETURN OF 
SPRING. 

Now Spring, returning, comes with genial gales, 

The equinoctial fury of the sky- 
Before the balmy breath of zephyr quails. 

Catullus ! bid the Phrygian fields good-bye, 
And, leaving warm Nicaea's fertile land, 
Speed to where Asia's famous cities stand. 

Even now my fluttering heart begins to feel 
Fond fancy's soft anticipating swell ; 

My joyful feet are quick with new-born zeal ; 
Ye sweet companions of my youth, farewell ! 

We, who together left our distant home, 

Homeward by various ways diversely roam. 



XLVII. 
TO PORCIUS AND SOCRATION. 

O Porcius and Socration ! each the minion 
Of Piso — scum and starvelings of the land ! 

Do ye in that low profligate's opinion 
Before Verannius and Fabullus stand % 

Do ye feast daily upon dainty meats, 

While they must hunt for biddings in the streets ? 



TO CICERO. 71 



XLVIII. 
ON A BEAUTY. 

The honey'd eyes of one so fair 

Could I but press for ever, 
Three hundred thousand kisses there 

I'd print, and tire, oh! never, 
Though more than autumn's dry ears were 

The kisses I should give her. 



XLIX. 

TO CICERO. 

Tully, most eloquent of all the line 
Of Romulus, past, present, or to be, 
Catullus sends sincerest thanks to thee, 
Poorest of bards — as far the poorest he 
As thou art first in eloquence divine. 



72 TO LICINIUS. 



TO LICINIUS. 

Dear Licinius, at our leisure 

Much we sported yesterday ; 
Wrote, as suited men of pleasure, 

On my tablets many a lay. 
Each, o'er every measure ranging, 

Penn'd in play the polish'd line, 
Mutual sallies interchanging, 

'Mid the joke and o'er the wine. 

And I left you so excited 

With your wit and jollity, 
I no more in food delighted, 

Nor in sleep could close an eye ; 
Wayward frenzy kept me waking, 

In my bed I tumbled o'er, 
Yearning for the day-dawn breaking, 

To be with my friend once more. 

But, when lay my limbs toil-weary, 

In a half-lethargic state, 
I this ditty spun, my cheery 

Friend, to tell you of my fate ; 
Be not proud, nor spurn, I pray you, 

Apple of mine eye ! my prayer, 
Lest stern Nemesis repay you. 

She is fierce : beware ! beware ! 



TO LESBIA. 73 



LL a 
TO LESBIA. 

Godlike to me that youth appears, 
Yea, more than god, if more may be, 
Who, seated face to face with thee, 

Thy dulcet laughter sees and hears ; 

Ah, wretched me ! of sense bereft, 
For, when I cast on thee a glance, 
To me the power of utterance, 

O Lesbia, is no longer left. 

Freezes my tongue ; through nerve and limb 
The subtle flame electric veers ; 
Unbidden tingle both mine ears ; 

Mine eyes in seas of darkness swim ; 

[Soul-chilling sweats adown me pour * 
Cold shiverings through my vitals pass ; 
And I am greener than the grass, 

And breathless seem to live no more.] 



74 ON SOMEBOD V AND CAL VUS. 



LI. b 

Ease, O Catullus, ruin brings, 
Ease is thy joy and chief delight, 
Ease hath erewhile in rayless night 

Entomb'd proud states and mighty kings. 



LII. 



TO HIMSELF, ON STRUMA AND 
VATINIUS. 

Catullus, why life's burden longer bear] 
Now Struma Nonius fills the curule chair, 
And, by the consulship, the blackest lie 
Vatinius swears : why live, Catullus, why] 



LIIL 
ON SOMEBODY AND CALVUS. 

I laugh'd at a man in the crowd t' other day, 

Who, as Calvus was lustily trouncing 
Vatinius, and wondrously well, sooth to say, 

Was the crimes of the scoundrel denouncing ; 
Cried, uplifting his hands, and with wonder nigh dumb : 
" Mighty gods ! what an eloquent hop-o'-my-thumb." 



TO CAMEEIUS. 75 



LIV. 

TO CAESAR. 

Coarse Caesar ! would that Otho's puny pate, 
And half-wash'd Vettius, and lewd Libo's prate, 
If nothing else, might thy displeasure gain, 
And that of old Fuffetius, young again : 
Once more from my iambics thou shalt wince ; 
They 're honest, ne'ertheless, most noble prince. 



LV. 

TO CAMERIUS. 

(from the text of doering.) 

If I should not be irksome thought, 

Pray tell me where you hide % 
The Campus, Circus I have sought, 

And every bookstall tried, 
Traversed immortal Jove's right sacred fane, 
And Pompey's portico, but all in vain. 

My friend, I every girl address'd 

Who wore a smile serene, 
"Where is Camerius?" — hard I press' d — 

" Come, tell, you wicked quean f - 
And one her bosom all unveiling said : 
11 He lurks between these nipples rosy-red/' 



76 TO CAMERIUS. 

'Twere toil Herculean thee to tear 

From such a favour'd seat, 
No wonder you 're from home you swear, 

Come tell me your retreat ; 
Out with it boldly in the face of day, 
Or do the milk-white maidens hold you, pray % 

If in close mouth you keep your tongue, 

You spoil love's every fruit, 
For Venus joys to dwell among 

Love-tattle, then, why mute 1 
Still, if you will, be silent evermore, 
But let me share your friendship as before. 

Were I the guardian lord of Crete, 

If Pegasus me bore, 
If Ladus I, or Perseus fleet, 

Who winged sandals wore, 
Did I the white swift team of Rhesus rein, 
Or match the feather-footed flying twain, 

Or were the rapid fury mine 

Of winds that scour the air ; — 
In seeking for that haunt of thine 

My marrow I 'd outwear ; — 
Devour'd by many languors I would be, 
Friend of my heart ! in searching after thee. 



TO MAMURRA AND CAESAR. 77 



LVL 
TO CATO. 

Here 's a joke well worth hearing, my Cato, 
A thing full of humour and fun, 

If you love me I pray you give way to 
A good hearty laugh when I Ve done. 

I 've just caught a young rascal decoying 
My sweetheart with speeches so fine, 

While she sat beside him enjoying 
His glances as if they 'd been mine. 

Venus ! goddess to lovers still dearest, 
My passion I could not contain, 

So I just took the weapon was nearest, 
And pommell'd him well with my cane. 



LVIL 
TO MAMURRA AND CAESAR. 

Disgraceful Mamurra and Caesar I bright stars ! 

In vice ye are charmingly suited, 
No wonder : ye both on your face wear the scars, 
One of Roman and t' other of Formian wars, 

Indelibly stamp'd and deep-rooted. 



78 ON RUFA AND RUFULUS. 

Diseased both alike, alike twin-brothers rare, 

Bedfellows, both learned reputed, 
Alike ye shine forth an adulterous pair, 
Twin rivals alike for the smiles of the fair, 
In vice, oh, how charmingly suited ! 



LVIII. 
TO COELIUS, CONCERNING LESBIA. 

Coelius, my Lesbia, Lesbia who of yore 

Shone first in every charm and winning grace, 

She whom alone Catullus prized before 
His very self, yea, even all his race, 

Now in the open street and narrow lane 

Barters with Rome's proud sons her charms for gain. 



LIX. 

ON RUFA AND RUFULUS. 

Does Rufulus, then, the prim coxcomb, carouse 

With Bononian Rufa, Menenius' spouse? 

That wretch youVe oft seen in the graveyards ere- 

while 
A-stealing a meal from the funeral pile, 



NUPTIAL SONG. 79 

And who, filching the bread that rolPd down from 

the flame, 
Was beat by the half-shaved corse-burner] The 

same. 



LX. , 

FRAGMENT. 

Of lioness on Lybia's mountains roaming, 
Or barking Scylla with mad fury foaming, 

Art thou the dark-soul'd son 1 
That thou couldst hear a suppliant's voice, despising 
His cries for help and shrieks heart-agonising, 

Too cruel hearted one ! 



LXI. 



NUPTIAL SONG IN HONOUR OF JUNIA 
AND MANLIUS. 

Habitant of Helicon ! 

Offspring of Urania fair ! 
Thou who bear'st the tender bride 
To the loving bridegroom's side, 

O Hymen ! hear our prayer ! 



8o NUPTIAL SONG IN HONOUR OF 

With sweet-odour' d marjoram flowers 
Wreathe thy beauty-radiant brow ; 

Seize the veil of flame-bright hue ; 

Joyous come with saffron shoe 
Upon thy foot of snow. 

Rouse thee on the gladsome day ! 

Chanting nuptial strains divine, 
Let thy silvery voice resound ; 
Foot it nimbly : brandish round 

The torch of blazing pine. 

Junia comes to Manlius, 

As Idalian Venus came 
To the judge on Ida's height — 
Comes, a maid with auspice bright, 

And pure unsullied name, 

Like an Asian myrtle fair — 

All its branchlets gemm'd with flowers ! 
Which the Hamadryad girls 
Nurse with morning's dewy pearls — 

A plaything in their bowers. 

Come, then ! here thy footsteps bear, 
Haste to leave the Aonian caves 

Of the rocky Thespian hill, 

Which cool Aganippe's rill 
With crystal waters laves. 



JUNTA AXD MAXLIUS. 8 1 

Summon home the happy bride, 

Yearning with her lord to be, 
Bind her soul with love's strong strings, 
As the clasping ivy clings, 

Here, there, all round the tree. 

Spotless maidens ! swell the train : 

Equal bliss ye soon shall know, 
On a like auspicious day : 
Carol loud the measured lay, 

O Hymen ! Hymen, O ! 

That, when hearing he is call'd 

To his office, he may prove 
Favouring, nor turn aside, 
Leading here a virtuous bride, 

And blending hearts in love. 

Whom should lovers more invoke — 

More invoke in weal or woe ? 
Whom in heaven shall men with more 
Heartfelt reverence adore ? 

O Hymen ! Hymen, O ! 

For his daughters oft the sire 

Calls on thee with loving fear : 
Maidens loose for thee the zone : 
And the bridegroom hears alone 

Thy name with eager ear. 



82 NUPTIAL SONG IN HONOUR OF 

On the passion-burning youth 

Blooming girl thou dost bestow, 
From the doting mother's breast, 
Hymenaeus! god thrice blest ! 
O Hymen I Hymen, O ! 

Venus but for thee achieves 

Nought deserving honour fair : 
Lend but thou a willing ear, 
She with every gift can cheer : 
Who dares with thee compare ] 

Homes are childless but for thee ; 

For the father smiles no son 
Who with heirs his line may swell : 
Will it thou, and all is well : 

O Hymen, peerless one ! 

Where thy rites are unobserved, 
Never guardian souls are given 

O'er the godless land to dwell : 

Will it thou, and all is well : 
Thou peerless child of heaven ! 

Hark ! the virgin comes along, 

Throw the barr'd gates open wide : 

See the flambeaux' lustrous trains ! 

But thou tarriest ; daylight wanes : 

Come forth ! come forth, young bride ! 



J UN I A AND MANLIUS. 83 

Maiden shame her step retards, 
Though she 's eager, x flows the tide 

Of tears, that she must go away ; 

But thou tarriest ; pales the day : 

Come forth ! come forth, young bride ! 

O Aurunculeia, 

Weep not : there 's no fear for thee, 
That a fairer maiden may- 
View the glorious orb of day 

Uprising from the sea. 

So, in rich lord's garden ground, 
Deck'd with flowers on every side, 

The hyacinth unrivall'd reigns ; 

But thou tarriest ; daylight wanes : 

Come forth ! come forth, young bride ! 

If it seemeth fit to thee, 

Youthful bride ! no longer bide ; 
Come and hear our nuptial strains : 
See the flambeaux' golden manes ! 

Come forth ! come forth, young bride ! 

Never, faithless, shall thy lord 

Be by wanton base caress'd, 
Nor, allured to other arms, 
Wish, for venal beaut/s charms, 

To leave thy tender breast. 



84 NUPTIAL SONG IN HONOUR OF 

He, as clasps the slender vine 
Trees that flourish by its side, 

Shall be clasp' d in thy embrace ; 

But the daylight pales apace : 

Come forth ! come forth, young bride ! 



O! 

Too radiant-footed bed ! 

What rich joys thy lord await, 
What rich joys in still night-tide, 

What rich joys at noon of day ; 

But the daylight dies away : 

Come forth ! come forth, young bride ! 

Youths ! the flambeaux brandish high, 

See the saffron veil's bright glow, 
Sing in measure, swell the lay : 
Hymen ! Hymen ! come, we pray, 
O Hymen ! Hyrnen, O ! 

All around let now resound 

Songs of mirth and wanton glee ; 

Sharer of his former joys, 

Shower among the happy boys 
The nuts they crave from thee. 



JUNIA AND MANLIUS. 85 

Shower the nuts among the boys ; 

Long enough 'twas thine to live 
Sportive, and with nuts to play : 
Manlius claims his bride to-day, 

The nuts then freely give. 

Thou didst scorn the rustic throng 

But to-day and yesterday : 
Loveliest leaves are soonest sere ; 
Youth is fleeting, age is near: 

Come, throw the nuts away. 

Perfumed bridegroom ! though thou griev'st, 

Bid thy cherish' d darling go, 
Though thy heart be still as fain, 
From the sports of youth abstain : 

O Hymen ! Hymen, O ! 

Thou hast only join'd in those, 

By our laws allow' d, we know ; 
But what fits the youthful heart 
Is not aye the husband's part : 

O Hymen ! Hymen, O ! 

Never, youthful bride ! deny 
What thou to thy lord dost owe, 

Lest some freer girl decoy 

Him with dreams of lawless joy : 
O Hymen ! Hymen, O ! 



86 NUPTIAL SONG IN HONOUR OF 

Lo ! a rich and happy home 

Doth thy lord on thee bestow, 
To be aye by thee possess'd, 
(Hymenaeus ! god thrice blest ! 
O Hymen ! Hymen, O !) 

Even till feeble palsied age, 

Crown'd with locks of driven snow, 

Listless lists to every call, 

Witless nodding all to all : 
O Hymen ! Hymen, O ! 

O'er the step with omen fair 

Lift her feet of golden glow : 
Enter now the polish' d door : 
Hymen, Hymen, evermore ! 
O Hymen ! Hymen, O! 

See ! thy husband lieth now 
On his Tyrian couch, and, lo ! 

Yearneth heart and soul for thee ; 

Come, O Hymen, fond and free ! 
O Hymen ! Hymen, O ! 

In his heart not less than thine 

Dbth the flame of passion glow, 
But a fiercer inward fire 
Fills his soul with deep desire : 
O Hymen ! Hymen, O ! 



JUNIA AND MANLIUS. 87 

Purple-mantled youth ! now leave — 
Leave the maiden's arm of snow. 

Let her to his couch repair, 

Hymen, ever fond and fair ! 
O Hymen ! Hymen, O ! 

Matrons ! who have faithful been 

To your faithful husbands, go, 
Place the tender maid aright, 
Place the maid with omen bright : 

O Hymen ! Hymen, O ! 

Bridegroom ! come ! Thy radiant bride, 

With a rosy blush imbued, 
In her chamber waits for thee, 
Like a white parthenice, 

Or poppy saffron-hued. 

Husband ! by the gods above ! 

But thou none the less art fair, 
Nor doth Venus thee despise ; 
But the daylight pales : arise, 

Nor linger longer there. 

Neither hast thou linger'd long. 

Now thou 'rt come : may Venus prove 
Favouring, since before our face 
Thou thy darling dost embrace, 

And hid'st not virtuous love. 



88 NUPTIAL SONG. 

Of thy many thousand joys 
Who to tell the sum aspires, 

May he sooner count the sands 

On the Erythrean strands, 
Or midnight's twinkling fires. 

Sport at pleasure, and may soon 

Sons on sons up round you spring : 
Let not such an ancient name 
Wither in a childless fame, 
But aye be blossoming. 

May a young Torquatus soon 

From his mother's bosom slip 
Forth his tender hands, and smile 
Sweetly on his sire the while, 
With half-oped tiny lip. 

May each one a Manlius 

In his infant features see, 
And may every stranger trace, 
Clearly graven on his face, 
His mother's chastity. 

May such praise, O blooming bride ! 

Crown thy happy progeny, 
As Telemachus retains, 
Fruit of that best mother's veins, 

The chaste Penelope. 



NUPTIAL SONG. 89 

Virgins ! now the portals close : 
Cease your revels : now 'tis time, 

Happy pair ! to seal love's pledge ; 

Exercise your privilege 

In youth's fond lusty prime. 



LXIL 
NUPTIAL SONG. 

YOUTHS. 

Hesperus comes ! ho, youths, arise ! above Olympus' 

height 
The star of eve at length displays his long-expected 

light : 
'Tis time to rise — to leave the festal banquet, come 

away! 
Soon will the virgin come, and soon be sung the bridal 

lay. 
Hymen, O Hymenaee ! Hymen ades, O Hymenaee ! 

MAIDENS. 

Ho, maidens ! do ye see the youths ? meet them with 

right goodwill, 
Surely the Herald of the Night beams clear o'er Oeta's 

hill ; 



90 NUPTIAL SONG. 

'Tis so : and see ye not how nimbly trip the youths 
along 1 

Nor leap'd they forth for nought : 'twere fame to con- 
quer them in song. 
Hymen, O Hymenaee ! Hymen ades, O Hymenaee ! 

YOUTHS. 

Not easily, O youths ! shall we the wreath of victory 

gain, 
Mark how our fair-cheek' d rivals muse apart, nor 

muse in vain ; 
Right memorable is the lay the maidens have de- 

sign'd ; 
Nor strange : since thus they ply their task with un- 
divided mind. 
With busy ears for bootless talk we 've fritter'd time 

away, 
A just defeat will then be ours : for labour gains the 

day; 
Wherefore, let now at least the theme your careful 

study claim ; 
Hark ! 'tis your rivals, now prepare responses meet 

to frame. 
Hymen, O Hymenaee! Hymen ades, O Hymenaee! 

MAIDENS. 

Hesper ! what heaven-revolving orb beams with more 

cruel ray, 
Who from the mother's arms the clinging child canst 

tear away, 



NUPTIAL SONG. 9 1 

And on the passion-burning youth the guileless girl 

bestow, 
What deed more ruthless stains the town that 's taken 

by the foe ] 
Hymen, O Hymenaee ! Hymen ades, O Hymenaee ! 



YOUTHS. 

Hesper ! what star with gladder radiance beams in 

yonder sky 1 
Who with thy flame the plighted nuptial vow dost 

ratify ; 
The sire's and suitor's pledge to seal thy beams alone 

have power : 
What by the gods to mortals given can match this 

blissful hour ? 
Hymen, O Hymenaee ! Hymen ades, O Hymenaee ! 



MAIDENS. 

Companions ! Hesper from our midst has borne a 

white-robed mate : 
Thou star of ill ! whene'er thou com'st the watchers 

guard the gate, 
The prowler lurks by night, and oft, in morning's 

shadows gray, 
Thou, changed to Phosphor, lightest up the unhal- 

loVd spoiler's way. 
Hymen, O Hymenaee ! Hymen ades, O Hymenaee ! 



92 NUPTIAL SONG. 



YOUTHS. 

To chide thee with feign'd railleries the maidens 

never tire, 
What if they chide, while they with inmost soul thy 

beams desire? 
Hymen, O Hymenaee! Hymen ades, O Hymenaee! 

MAIDENS. 

As springs the sweet secluded flower in garden's 

fenced space, 
Unknown to browsing flock, untouch'd by plough- 
share's grazing trace, 
By breezes soothed, by sunshine fired, and foster'd 

by the rain, 
Which many a youth and many a maiden fondly seek 

- in vain ; 
When once nail-nipp'd, the faded flower, no youths, 

no maidens prize : 
So, while the maid's a maid, she glads her friends' 

and playmates' eyes ; 
But when her sullied form has lost the virgin charms 

she wore, 
To lover she 's no longer dear, nor dear to maiden 

more. 
Hymen, O Hymenaee ! Hymen ades, O Hymenaee ! 

YOUTHS. 

As grows the unwedded vine within the bare and 

barren field, 
Nor ever rears its head erect, nor mellow grape doth 

yield, 



NUPTIAL SONG. 93 

But, bending 'neath its weary weight, its sprays and 

roots entwined, 
Withers and dies unheeded all by peasant or by 

hind : 
When once elm-wedded, then by hind's and peasant's 

toil 'tis rear'd : 
So, while the maid 's a maid, she spends a lonely age 

uncheer'd, 
But meetly wedded, in the golden springtide of 

desire, 
She glads a loving husband's heart, nor grieves a 

doting sire. 
Hymen, O Hymenaee ! Hymen ades, O Hymenaee ! 

YOUTHS AND MAIDENS. 

Since such a husband shall be thine, O maiden ! come 

away ! 
He is thy sire's and mother's choice, whom thou 

must needs obey : 
Thy sole disposal is not thine — a part thy parents 

claim — 
Thy sire and mother each a third, to thee belongs 

the same : 
'Twere unbeseeming to resist thy parents' double 

power, 
Who to the bridegroom yield their rights, together 

with thy dower. 
Hymen, O Hymenaee! Hymen ades, O Hymenaee ! 



94 A TVS. 



LXIIL 
ATYS. 

In eager haste in rapid bark young Atys cross'd the 
billowy main, 

Swift leap'd ashore, rush'd to the Phrygian grove, 
Cybebe's dark domain ; 

And, goaded on by raging madness, frenzied inspira- 
tion's prey, 

There, with a sharp-edged flinty stone, all trace of 
manhood swept away. 



And when the sexless being saw the mutilated form 
he wore, 

And gazed upon the ground bespatter'd with the warm 
and reeking gore, 

Up in his snowy hand he caught the timbrel light, 
with furious glee, 

The timbrel of thy dread initiate rites, great Mother 
Cybele! 

And, rattling with his tender ringers on the bullock's 
hollow hide, 

In accents wild and tremulous he thus to his com- 
panions cried : 



A TVS. 95 

" Away, ye Galli ! hence ! away to Cybele's high 

forests fly, 
Away, ye roving crew ! your mistress Dindymene's 

service ply, 
Ye ! who like exiles from your homes have sought 

strange lands, led on by me, 
Who 've dared the rapid briny deep, the raging fury 

of the sea, 
And, loathing woman's charms, unmanned your lusty 

forms with maiming rite, 
On in your rapid wanderings speed, your souls with 

frenzy's fire incite ! 



" Drive from your minds all coward fears ; haste, 

hither haste, and follow me ! 
On to your mistress' Phrygian shrine — the Phrygian 

groves of Cybele — 
Where echoing cymbals clash, where timbrels roll 

around their swelling tone, 
Where the Phrygian flutist's curvSd reed drones out 

its dreary moan, 
Where raving Maenads madly toss their ivy-circled 

heads about, 
And urge their hallow'd mysteries with shrieking yell 

and piercing shout. 
Where to and fro the wandering crew of votaries de- 
light to stray, — 
'Tis there, with wild careering, we must speed : away ! 

away ! away ! " 



96 A TVS. 

When Atys, man no more, had thus unto his sexless 

comrades sung, 
Suddenly the chorus raised the yell with frenzy-quiver- 
ing tongue, 
Booms the light timbrel once again — again the hollow 

cymbals clash ; 
On to green Ida with impetuous steps the frantic 

votaries dash. 
Infuriate, panting, wild, bewildered, Atys, leading on 

the throng, 
Smote the round timbrel's airy form, through murky 

forests rush'd along, 
Like wild, unbroken heifer, bursting from the galling 

yoke, he fled, 
The rapid Galli close behind their rapid-footed leader 

sped. 

And when they, weak and wearied, reach their mis- 
tress Dindymene's home, 

Fasting, they sink to sleep, their bodies with unmeas- 
ured toil o'ercome : 

Dull languors o'er them steal, with heavy drowsiness 
their eyelids close : 

And the raving madness of their souls is lull'd a while 
in calm repose. 

But when the golden-visaged Orb of Day with eyes all 

radiant smiled 
Upon the pale-hued sky of dawn, the solid earth, and 

ocean wild, 



A TVS. 97 

And with his thunder-footed steeds urged on the shades 

of night apace, 
Then Sleep from Atys fled, and, trembling, sought - ♦ 

Pasithea's embrace. 



When now with sweet refreshing rest his furious 
frenzy was allay* d, 

And Atys with untroubled soul his deeds in sober 
reason weigh'd, 

And with unclouded mind beheld the sexless wretch 
he was, and where, 

Back to the sea he rush'd, soul-toss'd upon the bil- 
lows of despair, 

And, gazing with tear-welling eyes upon the ocean's 
vast expanse, 

Pour'd forth unto his native land this plaint, his woe's 
wild utterance : 



" My country ! land that gave me birth ! from which, 

wretch that I am ! I fled, 
Like hireling from his master's roof, and to the groves 

of Ida sped', 
There amid snows and frozen dens of savage brutes 

my lot to bear, 
And rove, a frantic wretch, and rouse the forest prowler 

from his lair : 

G 



98 A TVS. 

" Where shall I deem thee, parent clime ] Oh ! in 

what region dost thou lie ? 
While reason's fitful gleam remains, thee-ward I long 

to turn mine eye. 
Must I now tread these dreary deserts, far, far distant 

from my home ? 
Far from my fatherland, possessions, friends, and 

parents, must I roam ? 
Banish' d the Forum, Race-course, Ring, debarr'd the 

loved Gymnasium's pale ] 
My wretched, wretched soul, for ever and for ever v 

pour thy wail. 



" What form is there I have not worn 1 — boy, youth, 

man, votaress ] — on the soil 
Of the Gymnasium I was first, — the pride and glory 

of the oil ; 
My gates were throng'd, my threshold warm, my home 

with flowery chaplets hung, 
When morning woke me, and the sun his golden 

radiance o'er me flung. 



" And must I serve the gods i alas ! a howling slave 

of Cybele ! 
A Maenad S part of what I was, — a sterile, sexless 

devotee 1 



A TVS. 99 

And must I ever on the snow-clad regions of green 

Ida pine, 
And linger on 'neath Phrygia's frowning peaks while 

weary life is mine, 
Where roams the woodland-nurtured stag, where 

prowls the forest-ranging boar 1 
Oh, now I rue the deed I've done, and mourn my 

rashness o'er and o'er." 



When fell these accents from his rosy lips upon the 

wandering air, 
The ears of the immortals caught the tidings of his 

wild despair ; 
Then Cybele unyoked her car, and freed the lions 

from her hold, 
And, fiercely goading, thus harangued the left hand 

smiter of the fold : 



" On, Savage ! blast him with despair ! on, on ! in 

terror and dismay 
Scare into yonder shaggy shades the caitiff wretch 

who 'd flee my sway, 
Go ! sweep thy tail and lash thy flanks, roar till the 

forest roars again, 
And wildly, fiercely toss upon thy brawny neck thy 

tawny mane." 



IOO A TVS. 

Thus spake the awful Cybele, and freed her lion from 

the yoke. 
Rousing his soul of fire, he rush ; d, roar'd, through 

the crashing branches broke, 
And when he neard the lonely beach, white with the 

foam of ocean's tide, 
And by the glassy mirror of the sea the tender Atys 

spied, 
On with a bound he sprung. Back to his wilds the 

frantic being fled, 
And there, 'mid dreary wastes, a life of servile bondage 

ever led. 



/ I • I I I ,1 J 

O great and potent deity! O goddess dread and 

marvellous ! t j 

O Cybele' diyine ! queen of the forest realms of Din- 

dymus, 
From me and from my home thy inspirations wild be 

far away : 
To thy dark rites and frenzied dreams be other votaries 

a prey ! 



NUPTIALS OF PELEUS AND THETIS. 101 



LXIV. 
THE NUPTIALS OF PELEUS AND THETIS. 

'Tis said that pines that grew of yore on Pelion's 
woody height, 

SaiFd far across the liquid realm that owns old Nep- 
tune's might, 

Even to the waves of Phasis' stream and the Aeetaean 
strand: 

When chosen youths — the beauty and the strength of 
Graecia's land — 

With eager hearts to wrest from Colchian's hand the 
fleece of gold, 

Sped through the briny deep, in rapid ship, their 
journey bold, 

And dared with pliant oars of fir the plains of azure 
scour : 

For these the goddess, who keeps ward in high em- 
battled tower, 

A wheelless chariot form'd, to flit before the gentle 
breeze, 

By fitting to a curved keel the closely-knitted trees. 

That gallant bark first skimm'd along the erst unfur- 
row'd seas. 



102 THE NUPTIALS OF 

Soon as with forward prow the windy sea she cut in 

twain, 
And the oar-tortured wave grew white with spray amid 

the main, 
From out the seething gulf emerged, their faces wan 

with fright, 
Sea Nereids, wrapt in wonder at the strange, un- 
wonted sight. 
On that, and ne'er on other morn did mortal eyes 

behold 
The ocean Nymphs unveil their forms of fair, immortal 

mould ; 
Up from their hoary home they rose, breast-low the 

wave above, 
Then Peleus' soul, with Thetis fired, was kindled into 

love ; 
Then Thetis on a mortal's love look'd down with no 

disdain ; 
Then, too, her sire his sanction gave to the union of 

the twain. 



Hail ! race of heroes ! Hail ! whom birth an age far 
happier gave, 

Hail ! offspring of immortals ! hail ! blest mother of 
the brave ! 

And while I sing this lay of mine, I '11 oft invoke 
your name ; 

Thine, too, whom such high nuptials crown with never- 
dying fame, 



PELEUS AND THETIS. 103 

O Peleus ! prop of Thessaly ! to whom eternal Jove, 
The almighty father of the gods, resigned his cherish'd 

love. 
Did Thetis, NereuV fairest child, accept thy prorTer'd 

hand % 
Thy claim to wed their grandchild did old Tethys 

not withstand, 
And Ocean who with welling waves encircles every 

land? 



Soon as the rolling wheels of time brought round the 

long'd-for day, 
To Peleus' home Thessalia's nobles flock without 

delay, 
And crowds all joyous, wishing joy, thick throng the 

regal hall, 
And many a present bring : joy beams upon the face 

of all. 
Now Scyros' isle is left behind, and Phthian Tempe's 

homes, 
And Crannon's dwellings, and Larissa's walls and 

stately domes, 
All to Pharsalia hie ; Pharsalia's halls in crowds they 

seek. 
No peasant tills the fields, the bullock's neck grows 

soft and sleek, 
The lowly vine no more is clear'd of weeds by crooked 

rakes, 
No more the bull with ploughshare prone the crumb- 
ling glebe upbreaks, 



104 THE NUPTIALS OF 

The primer's hook no longer lops the trees' um- 
brageous boughs, 

The squalid and corroding rust o'erspreads the un- 
heeded ploughs. 



But in the royal mansion, look around where'er you 

will, 
The silver bright and shining gold your eyes with 

wonder fill ; 
On seats the polish'd ivory shines, on boards the 

goblets gleam, 
And all the gorgeous palace-halls with regal splen- 
dours teem. 
A couch in central chamber stood, whereon the bride 

might lie, 
Inlaid with polish'd Indian tooth, and veil'd from 

vulgar eye 
By coverlet of purple hue — the sea-shell's rosy dye ; 
And on this coverlet were wrought the forms of men 

of old, 
Of heroes gone, whose high renown with wondrous 

art was told. 



There Ariadne stood, on Dia's wave-resounding shore, 
And wild o'ermastering agonies her gentle bosom 

tore ; 
Her gaze is fix'd on Theseus, as in rapid bark he flies, 
Nor can she yet believe she sees the scene before her 

eyes — 



PELEUS AND THETIS. 105 

That, on uprising from her bed, deceitful slumber 

gone, 
She finds her wretched self upon the lonely sands 

alone. 



But he, ungrateful youth ! speeds fast his course with 

smiting oar, 
His promise to the winds he throws, remembering it 

no more ; 
On him, far from the weedy strand, she strains her 

sorrowing eyes, 
A Bacchant's marble image, yelling forth her madden- 
ing cries : 
Within her soul, like billows, roll the heaving waves 

of care, 
Upon her brow no fillet now confines her golden 

hair, 
No more with its light vesture is her snowy bosom 

wound, 
No more the fine-wrought girdle binds her struggling 

breast around. 
From all her body gliding down on every side they fall, 
The salt sea-waves before her feet are sporting with 

them all. 



She cares not for her floating veil, she cares not for 

her crown ; 
What wonder if her lover's loss all other losses 

drown 1 



106 THE NUPTIALS OF 

Her heart, her soul, her mind by love's wild passions 

are consumed. 
Ah ! wretched Ariadne ! to distracting sorrows doom'd ! 
For Venus many a thorny care implanted in thy mind, 
What time heroic Theseus, leaving Athens' shores 

behind, 
Did from Piraeus' winding coast his gallant vessel 

bring, 
And enter the Gortynian halls of Crete's unrighteous 

king. 



To wash away a direful plague — so ancient legends 

tell- 
That for Androgeos' murder foul on Cecrops' city fell, 
Her chosen youths and spotless maids were wont to 

sail afar 
To Creta's isle — a banquet for the savage Minotaur : 
And since the infant city groan'd beneath such 

grievous woes, 
To give his life for his dear land brave Theseus rather 

chose 
Than that Cecropia's youths should find, across the 

Cretan wave, 
A funeral 'reft of funeral rites, within a living grave. 



So, speeding in his rapid bark, borne on by gentle 

gales, 
He reaches haughty Minos' realms, his regal palace 

hails. 



PELEUS AND THETIS. 107 

Soon as the royal virgin's eager eye beholds his 
face — 

The maid, who knows no other's, save a mothers fond 
embrace, 

Round whose chaste bed sweet perfumes all their 
balmiest odours fling, 

Fair as along Eurotas' banks the budding myrtles 
spring, 

Or as the lovely flowers that streak spring's rainbow- 
colour' d wing — 

She burns, nor ever turns away her passion-drunken 
eyes, 

Till all amain through every vein love's flame en- 
kindled flies, 

And in her inmost marrow all its maddening frenzies 
rise. 



O cruel maddener of the mind ! divine, relentless 

boy! 
Who ever minglest bitter grief with mortals' sweetest 

joy; 

And thou, O queen of Golgos and Idalia's leafy glade, 
On what a billowy sea ye toss'd that soul-enkindled 

maid! 
What heavings for her fair-hair'd guest within her 

bosom roll'd ! 
What fears within her fainting heart made youth's 

warm blood run cold ! 
How oft more wan her cheek became than sheen of 

yellow gold ! 



108 THE NUPTIALS OF 

And when he yearn' d to brave the savage monster in 
his lair, 

And perish in his jaws, or earn the hero's guerdon 
there, 

She vow'd heaven-pleasing offerings, to her how fruit- 
less now ! 

Nor linger'd on her silent lip in vain the unspoken 
vow. 



For as the furious whirlwind, in its wild and eddying 

flight, 
Uptears the oak that waves its boughs on Taurus' 

lofty height, 
Or oozy cone-producing pine, with trunk of giant 

might : 
Far from its roots upborne it headlong falls with 

furious bound, 
Scattering, amid its crushing crash, destruction all 

around : 
So, Theseus with victorious arm the savage monster 

slew, 
That to the empty air his horns in vain up tossing 

threw. , 



Back, then, from forth the drear abyss with well- 
earn d fame he sped, 

Guiding his wandering footsteps with a skein of slen- 
der thread, 



PELEUS AND THETIS. 109 

That he might keep his memory clear amid its wind- 
ing ways, 
And find a place of egress from the labyrinthine maze. 



But why in this my song should more digressions find 

a place, 
Why tell how Ariadne, having fled her father's face — 
Fled a dear sister's loving arms, a mother's tender 

care, 
A mother who bewail'd her child in accents of despair, 
Her Theseus' honey'd love preferr'd all other things 

before, 
Or how the ship was wafted on to Dia's foaming 

shore, 
How then her husband, hard of heart, to every feeling 

steel'd, 
Departing, left her, soon as fatal sleep her eyelids 

seal'd ; 
And oft, 'tis said, her passion-kindled soul with fury 

flush'd, 
The piercing shrieks of rage from out her inmost 

bosom gush'd ; 
And now, that full of woe, she clomb the mountain's 

rugged steep, 
Whence she could see outspread below the wide and 

swelling deep, 
Anon the soft dress lifting that around her beauty 

hung, 
She, rushing forward, laved her limbs the rippling 

waves among, 



HO THE NUPTIALS OF 

And there, with streaming eyes and uttering sobbings 

cold and faint, 
The anguish' d maiden in her woe pour'd forth this 

wild complaint : 



" And is it thus, false Theseus ! far, far from her 
native land, 

Thou leavest Ariadne on a lone and barren strand'? 

And dost thou, thus departing, heaven's high behests 
despise ? 

Ingrate, and carry home with thee thy cursed per- 
juries ! 



" Could nothing change the purposes of thy unpitying 

mind? 
Could no warm stream of mercy to thy soul a channel 

find? 
Could thy relentless heart no pang of pity feel for 

me? 
Ah ! these are not the promises once fondly vow'd 

by thee • 
And these are not the joys my wretched hope was 

taught to prove, 
But happy union and the long'd-for sweets of wedded 

love : 
All scatter'd now, and strewn to every wind that 

sweeps the air. 



PELEUS AND THETIS. 1 1 1 

" Henceforth let never woman trust an oath that man 
shall swear, 

Nor count the tender speeches true his lying lips de- 
clare ; 

For when with lusting soul he yearns some object to 
enjoy, 

No oath, no promise then he deems too sacred to 
employ ; 

But when his soul is sated, and his burning passion 
dies, 

He fears to break no plighted vows, cares nought for 
perjuries. 



" 'Twas I who snatch'd thee from the gulf wide- 
yawning to devour, 

And rather chose to doom to death my brother 
Minotaur, 

Than fail thee, thou deceitful one ! in danger's awful 
hour ; 

For this to savage beasts and birds a prey shall I be 
thrown, 

And no kind hand shall heap the dust on me when 
life is gone. 



" What lioness gave birth to thee in lone rock- 

shelter'd cave % 
What sea conceived and spued thee forth from its 

wild foaming wave ] 



112 THE NUPTIALS OF 

Syrtis, or ravenous Scylla, or Chary bdis vast and 

stern % v 

Who for sweet life by me preserved dost render such 

return. 
And if to wed me now thy heart, all-changed, had no 

desire, 
Because thou loath'dst the stringent laws of my relent- 
less sire, 
At least thou mightst have carried me to thy own 

native land, 
That I with pleasant labour might have served at thy 

command, 
With the water's limpid stream I would have laved 

thy snow-white feet, 
Or gladly spread upon thy bed its purple coverlet. 



" But wherefore, madden'd with my woes, should I 

thus, all in vain, 
To the unconscious senseless air with wailings wild 

complain % 
It cannot hear my utter' d words, nor answer make 

again : 
For surely now, his sails the ocean's midmost billows 

reach, 
And not a human form is seen on this lone, weedy 

beach ; 
Thus in my latest hour, stern fate, insulting and 

severe, 
From my unheeded, hopeless cry, averts her envious 

ear. 



PELEUS AND THETIS. 1 13 

" Oh how I wish, Almighty Jove ! that ne'er in days 

of yore 
A ship from the Cecropian land had reach'd the 

Gnossian shore, 
Nor, to the indomitable bull bearing his tribute dire, 
The faithless mariner had sought the kingdom of my 

sire; 
Nor, in sweet guise concealing the fell purpose of his 

breast, 
That villain in my Cretan home had rested as a guest. 
Ruin'd, alas ! what hope is left % or whither shall I 

flee? 
The mountains of Idomene ? — the cruel, severing 

sea, 
With its broad trackless gulf, divides that friendly land 

from me. 
Can I expect a father's aid whose countenance I 

fled, 
Following the stern-soul'd youth whose arm my 

brother's blood had shed % 
Or from a husband's faithful love what solace can I 

reap? 
Deserted he has left me, and his oars now ply the 

deep. 
On this lone shore, this desert isle, no dwelling can 

be found, 
No egress hence — the ocean rolls a barrier all around ; 
There are no means of flight ; no hope ; mute desola- 
tion reigns ; 
Death staring me on every side, my certain doom 

remains. 

H 



1 14 THE NUPTIALS OF 

" Yet shall my languid eyes not cease to gaze upon 

the day, 
Nor from my wearied body shall the senses ebb 

away, 
Till on his head I beg the gods meet punishment to 

pour, 
And, thus betray'd, in my last hour heaven's holy faith 

implore. 



" Ye powers ! who to the crimes of men dire chastise- 
ment assign ; 

Eumenides ! around whose heads the snaky ringlets 
twine ; 

Whose brows portray the hellish wrath that rankles in 
your breast \ 

Oh ! hither, hither haste, and list to this the sad re- 
quest 

Which from my inmost soul, alas! to "misery con- 
signed, 

I 'm forced to pour — a helpless wretch, with burning 
madness blind ; 

And since even from my bosom's depths these bursts 
of anguish stream, 

Oh, doom them not to vanish like an airy, idle 
dream, 

But let him in that soul, in which he has abandon'd 
me, 

Bring on himself and all his race death and black 
infamy/' 



PELEUS AND THETIS. US 

When, with sad heart, she poured this plaint, and, wild 
with woe, besought 

Fierce retribution for the deeds of wrong that he had 
wrought, 

Her prayer the King Celestial heard, and awful 
bow ; d assent ; 

Earth and wild ocean trembled at his nod omnipo- 
tent, 

And all the glittering worlds were rock'd in the vast 
firmament. 



Then was the mind of Theseus with a darkening 

gloom opprest, 
And every mandate that before his constant soul pos- 

sest 
Was swept away, to rise no more in his forgetful 

breast : 
Nor did he to his sorrowing sire the gladdening signs 

display 
In token of his safe return to the Athenian bay. 



For ere the fleet left Pallas' seat to plough the briny 
wave, 

Ere Aegeus trusted yet his son the stormy winds to 
brave, 

'Tis said he clasp'd him to his breast, and these in- 
junctions gave : 



ll6 THE NUPTIALS OF 

" My peerless boy ! oh, dearer far to me than length 

of days, 
Whom I am now compell'd to send in danger's 

dubious ways ! 
My son ! but just restored to me in latest life's last 

stage, 
Since my own evil fortune and thy valour's burning 

rage 
Tear thee from my unwilling heart, ere yet my feeble 

eyes 
Rest on thy loved form till time their craving satis- 
fies : 
I will not send thee from my face with gladden' d 

heart elate, 
Nor suffer thee to bear away signs of propitious fate ; 
But first full many a bitter wail shall from my bosom 

flow, 
And with the earth and sprinkled dust I'll soil my 

locks of snow, 
Then, on thy flitting mast, dyed sails I '11 hang aloft in 

air, 
That with its dark Iberian hue thy canvas may de- 
clare 
What burning anguish wrings my soul, what pangs 

my bosom tear. 
And should the goddess, who in blest Itone has her 

shrine, 
(The guardian of "our native land, protectress of our 

line,) 
Grant that the monster's blood be shed by strong 

right arm of thine, 



PELEUS AND THETIS. 11/ 

Then see that in thy memory stored these precepts 
still have weight, 

Nor lapse of time e'er from thy mind my words ob- 
literate, 

And when thy native hills again shall rise before thine 
eye, 

Let everywhere thy sail-yards drop their robes of dis- 
mal dye, 

And let the twisted ropes the snow-white canvas hoist 
on high, 

That when I see it my glad heart glad tidings there 
may trace, 

When that auspicious day restores thee to thy father^ 
face." 



These mandates, that before he kept close treasured 
in his mind, 

Fled from his darken'd memory, nor left a trace be- 
hind, 

Like cloud from snow-capt mountains crest swept by 
a gale of wind. 



His sire, as from a turret's top he scann'd the oceans 

rim, 
His anxious eyes with ever-flowing tears fast waxing 

dim, 



Il8 THE NUPTIALS OF 

When the dark canvas of the inflated sail first hove in 

sight, 
Believing Theseus lost by cruel death's relentless 

might, 
Dash'd forward with a headlong bound from the dim 

craggy height. 

Thus Theseus, when he reached his home, which 

death's dark woes opprest, 
Was in his heart by such soul-agonising griefs dis- 

trest, 
As his ingratitude had fix'd in Ariadne's breast, 
When, anguish-wrung, she traced the ship receding 

from her view, 
And in her breast roll'd countless woes in aspect ever 

new. 

Elsewhere " Iacchus, ever young," flies hurrying from 

above, 
Round whom the Satyrs and the Nysa-rear'd Sileni 

rove, 
O Ariadne, seeking thee, and, fired with frantic love : 
See how with frenzied souls they rave, with fleet foot 

speeding by, 
And " Evoe, Evoe," wildly shout, and toss their heads 

awry; 
Some brandish in their hands aloft the ivy-circled 

spear, 
Some hurl about the mangled limbs of a dismember'd 

steer, 



PELEUS AND THETIS. 119 

Some all around their naked forms the wriggling ser- 
pents plait, 

Some with their wicker-basket stores dark orgies cele- 
brate, 

Orgies for ever seal'd except to ears initiate : 

There, with extended palms, some smite the timbrel's 
airy round, 

Or from the polish'd brazen plates wake the shrill 
tinkling sound ; 

By many, too, the trumpet's hoarsely-sounding blare 
is blown, 

And the barbaric pipe creaks forth its wild, ear- 
piercing tone. 



With forms like these the coverlet, all gorgeously be- 
spread, 

Enfolded with its drapery 7 and veil'd the bridal bed. 

Fill'd with the scenes that with delight their eager 
spirits fired, 

Ere yet the holy gods approached Thessalia's youths 
retired. 

As Zephyr crisps, with early breath, the still and 
sleeping sea, 

What time around the wandering Sun Dawn bids the 
shadows flee, • 

And wakes the sloping waves to life and morning 
liberty ; 

While, by a gentle breeze first fann'd, they undu- 
lating flow, 

And with a rippling murmur utter laughter soft and low; 



120 THE NUPTIALS OF 

Then, when the freshening gale blows strong, wild 

and more wildly war, 
And, flowing from the purple dawn, refulgent gleam 

afar : 
So from the royal vestibule slow pour'd the crowds 

away, 
Then homeward sped with quickening tread each as 

his journey lay. 



The crowd now gone, from Pelion's height old Chiron 

first appear'd, 
Bearing for nuptial offerings what stores the country 

rear'd, 
For flowers of every hue that o'er Thessalia's meadows 

grow, 
That stud her giant mountain-slopes or by her rivers 

blow, 
Drawn from the pregnant earth by warm Favonius' 

fostering glow, 
A rustic gift he brought, in plaited garlands, random- 
wreathed, 
And all the palace wore a smile, and fragrant odours 

breathed. 



Forthwith Peneus came, from Tempe's vale with ver- 
dure crown'd, 

Tempe, which dark o'erhanging forest pine-trees mantle 
round, 



PELEUS AND THETIS. 121 

Now left for Dorian dances of the beauteous Naiad 

throng \ 
Nor came he empty-handed — root and stem he bore 

along 
The lofty beeches and the stately laurel's tapering 

trees, 
The airy cypress, and the plane that flaunteth in the 

breeze, 
And thunder-blasted Phaethon's tall sister; all of 

these 
He placed around the mansion, laced the boughs the 

trunks between, 
That all the vestibule might wear a robe of leafy 



Behind him next Prometheus came, deep-versed in 

cunning lore, 
Still wearing feeble traces of the punishment he 

bore 
When from the barren jagged flinty crags that o'er 

him frown 'd, 
Erewhile he hung, his limbs with adamantine shackles 

bound. 



Then Jove himself, his holy spouse, and all his pro- 
geny, 

Came from the heavenly mansion, leaving, Phoebus, 
only thee, 

And thy twin-sister, who delights on Idrus' hill to be : 



122 THE NUPTIALS OF 

For, like thee, thy fair sister nursed 'gainst Peleus 
bitter spite, 

Nor with her presence deign'd to honour Thetis' nup- 
tial rite. 



When on the seats the immortals bent their snowy 
limbs around 

A board with viands manifold and choicest dainties 
crown'd, 

Then, while all through their feeble frames the palsied 
tremors ran, 

The Ancient Fates their truth-predicting canticle be- 
gan. 

Their trembling forms on every side a mantling vest- 
ment veil'd 

Of stainless white, around their heels its purple border 
trail' d ; 

On their ambrosial heads sat wreaths that with the 
snow had vied, 

While their untiring hands their endless labour cease- 
less plied. 

Their left hand held the distaff, shrouded in the wool's 
soft bed, 

The right, with upturn'd fingers, gently drew and 
form'd the thread, y 

Then twisting it upon the thumb that pointed to the 
ground, 

Kept the well-balanced spindle ever smoothly whirling 
round : 



PELE US A ND THE TIS. I 2 3 

With nipping tooth they smoothed the work where'er 
a tuft appear' d, 

And ever to their parched lips the woolly scraps ad- 
hered, 

Which from the fine-spun thread with constant care 
they clear'd away. 

Before their feet the shining wool in soft white fleeces 
lay 

In baskets wrought with willow-wands, all scrupulously 
stored ; 

And as they drew the fleeces forth the prescient sisters 
pour'd, 

With voices shrill, in strains diyine, this song of destiny, 

A song whose truth no after age will question or deny : 

" Peleus ! thou brilliant ornament ! thou valour- 
crowned one ! 

Great bulwark of Emathia's land ! most glorious in 
thy son, 

Hear, in this joyous hour, thy true, thy changeless 
future read ; 

Then, spindles, twine the threads by which dark des- 
tiny is sped, 

Run, spindles ! onward ! spindles, run, and twine the 
fatal thread. 



" Soon, soon shall Hesper come to crown thy fond 

marital dreams, 
And lead to thee thy beauteous bride with happy- 

omen'd beams, 



124 THE NUPTIALS OF 

Thy bride, who in soul-trancing bliss thy panting soul 

shall steep, 
And love-o'erwearied sink with thee in balmy languid 

sleep, 
While all around thy manly neck her ivory arm she '11 

spread. 
Run, spindles ! ever ceaseless run, and twine the fatal 

thread. 



" No house hath ever witness been to love so blest 

as this, ■ 
No love hath ever lovers join'd in such dear bond of 

bliss 
As now awaits this happy pair, this happy nuptial 

bed. 
Run, spindles ! ever ceaseless run, and twine the fatal 

thread. 



"To you Achilles shall be born, a hero void of 
fear, 

His back to foe he'll never show, but breast un- 
daunted rear, 

And when oft in the devious course the victor's path 
he '11 tread, 

The fleet stag's lightning footsteps shall by him be far 
outsped. 

Run, spindles ! ever ceaseless run, and twine the fatal 
thread. 



PELEUS AND THETIS. 1 25 

" Though valiant heroes seek the field no equal shall 
he know, 

When with the noblest blood of Troy the Phrygian 
plains will flow, 

And the third heir of perjured Pelops devastation 
dread 

In that long weary siege shall round the Trojan bul- 
warks spread. 

Run, spindles ! ever ceaseless run, and twine the fatal 
thread. 



" To all his gifts heroic, to all his deeds of fame, 
Mothers shall bear their witness beside the funeral 

flame, 
When in the dust their hoary hairs they '11 loosen from 

their head, 
And feebly smite their aged breasts in anguish for the 

dead. 
Run, spindles ! ever ceaseless run, and twine the fatal 

thread. 



" For as the reaper moweth down the unnumber'd 

ears of grain 
When crops 'neath autumn's burning sun wave yellow 

o'er the plain, 
So in the field he '11 reap the Trojan foe with hostile . 

blade. 
Run, spindles ! ever ceaseless run, and twine the fatal 

thread. 



126 THE NUPTIALS OF 

" A witness to his valiant deeds Scamander's flood 

shall be, 
Which, sparsely streaming to the rapid Hellespontic 

sea, 
Shall roll his dark corse-cumber'd waves pent in a 

narrower bed, 
A warm ensanguined river, rolling billows crimson-red. 
Run, spindles ! ever ceaseless run, and twine the fatal 

thread. 

" A witness, too, shall be the death-deliver' d captive 

maid, 
When on the lofty earth-raised mound her snow-white 

limbs are laid 
Prostrate beneath the axe's stroke — an offering to the 

dead. 
Run, spindles ! ever ceaseless run, and twine the fatal 

thread. 



" For when to the war-wearied Greeks the Fates shall 
grant at length 

To crush the walls by Neptune reared, the Dardan 
city's strength, 

Polyxena, like victim stooping to the two-edged steel 

On bended knee, a mangled, headless corse shall for- 
ward reel, 

And on the hero's lofty tomb the appeasing stream 
shall shed. 

Run, spindles ! ever ceaseless run, and twine the fatal 
thread. 



PELEUS AND THETIS. 1 27 

" Come, then, in wedlock's blissful bonds your loving 

hearts unite, 
Now let the bridegroom take his goddess-bride with 

omen bright, 
Now let the vestal to her husband's eager arms be 

led. 
Run, spindles ! ever ceaseless run, and twine the fatal 

thread. 



" Her nurse, when morning streaks the sky with 

blushes rosy-red, 
Shall find the necklace all too strait she wore when 

she was wed. 
Run, spindles ! ever ceaseless run, and twine the fatal 

thread. 



" Nor shall her anxious mother mourn a separated 

bed, 
But children's children shall arise before her hopes 

are fled. 
Run, spindles ! ever ceaseless run, and twine the fatal 

thread." 



Such were the fates of Peleus, such the oracles be- 
nign, 

The prescient sisters hymn'd in days of yore, with 
voice divine ; 



128 THE NUPTIALS OF 

For erst the heavenly gods appear'd in hero's chaste 
abode, 

And 'mid assembled throngs of men their holy pre- 
sence show'd ; 

While Piety, still undespised, maintain'd her saintly 
reign. 

Oft then the Father of the gods re-sought his fulgent 
fane, 

What time his annual sacred rites on festal days came 
round, 

And saw a hundred slaughter'd bulls fall welt'ring to 
the ground. 



Of from Parnassus' lofty brow the roving Bacchus 

flew, 
And drove along his hair-dishevelPd, yelling Thyad 

crew, 
While from the city's every nook the Delphians rush'd 

abroad, 
And at their smoking altars hail'd with joy the rosy 

god. 



Oft to the deadly strife of war great Mars in armour 

sped, 
Or rapid Triton's goddess-queen, or Rhamnus' maiden 

dread, 
And, rousing mortals to the charge, the armed legions 

led. 



PELEUS AND THETIS. 1 29 

But when in awful wickedness the earth deep-stained 

lay, 
And mortals from their lustful souls fair Justice chased 

away, 
When brother in a brother's blood his murderous 

hands imbrued, 
When son without a pang of grief his lifeless parent^ 

view'd ; 
When father fondly yearn'd that death might snatch 

his first-born boy, 
That an unwedded step-dame's charms he freely might 

enjoy; 
When mother, daring with her all-unconscious son to 

lie, 
Fear'd not to stain her household gods in her im- 
piety ; 
When right and wrong, in guilty madness mingled, 

met the view, 
Their justice-loving minds from man the holy gods 

withdrew • 
Wherefore for such assemblies now they never leave 

the sky, 
Nor in unclouded day endure the gaze of mortal eye. 



130 TO HORTALUS. 



LXV. 
TO HORTALUS. 

Though ceaseless griefs and cares my heart devour, 
And call me from the learned Virgins' fane, 

And though my woe-toss'd mind hath lost the power 
To breathe sweet poesy's melodious strain ; 

For o'er my brother's foot, clay-hued and chill, 

Flows Lethe's dark, inevitable wave ; 
And, ravish'd from my sight, his ashes fill, 

By far Rhoeteum's shore, a Trojan grave ; 

Though, Brother ! I no more thy voice shall hear, 
Ne'er see thy life-dear face in after day, 

Yet surely ever will I hold thee dear, 

And aye with griefs wan hues I '11 tinge my lay ; 

Yea, even as the Daulian bird her song 
Outpours in accents sweetly dolorous, 

When o'er the branch-gloom'd river all night long 
She wails the fate of perish'd Itylus : 

Yet, Hortalus, in Latin garb I 've drest 

For thee this poem of Battiades, 
Lest thou shouldst think thy wish had fled my breast, 

A bootless offering to the roving breeze. 



BERONICE "S HA IR. 1 3 1 

As glides the apple — furtive token fraught 

With tenderest love — from modest maiden's breast, 

Who, with heart-deep emotions all distraught, 
Forgets the treasure 'neath her silken vest, 

Which, when she springs her mother's kiss to claim, 

In all the innocence of girlish glee, 
Slips out and rolls along, while conscious shame 

Crimsons her rueful face \ — 'twas so with me. 



LXVI. 

BERONICE'S HAIR. 

(Translated by Catullus from the Greek of Callimachus.) 

Conon, who knew the great world's every light, 
The rise and setting of the orbs of night, 
How rapid Sol's bright beams eclipsed can die, 
How stars at stated periods leave the sky, 
How dulcet love to Latinos' rocks a while 
From her aerial course did Trivia wile : 
He saw me in the heavens new glory shed, 
Me, the fair lock from Beronice's head, 
Which she to many a god in dread alarms 
Had vow'd to give with outstretch' d ivory arms, 



1 3 2 BERONICE 'S HAIR. 

What time, in nuptial flush, her royal lord 
Against Assyria sped with ruthless sword, 
Wearing sweet scars from that nocturnal fray 
In which he bore her virgin spoils away. 

Do brides hate wedlock? or their parents' joy 
With floods of lying tears would they destroy, 
When o'er the nuptial chamber threshold led % 
False,. by the gods, are all the tears they shed ! 
Thou taught'st me this with many a sad lament, 
When to grim wars, O Queen, thy husband went ; 
Yet a lorn couch alone thou didst not mourn, 
No : but a brother from a sister torn. 
What anguish then thy inmost marrow tore ! 
What cares thy bosom harrow'd to the core, 
Reaving thy soul of sense ! yet sure had I 
Known thee from earliest years of courage high. 
Hadst thou forgot the deed that crown'd thee queen, 
Than which fame's roll no braver boasts, I ween? 
Yet when he left thee, O ye gods ! what sighs ! 
How oft thy wan hands wiped thy streaming eyes ! 
What god thee changed ? or will not lovers dwell 
Far from the ones they inly love so well ? 
'Twas then thcfti vowedst to all the gods to give 
Me, with the blood of bulls, should he but live, 
And, soon to thee returning, add in chains 
The Asian land to Egypt's wide domains : 
For these dear boons, in heaven's host number'd now, 
With virgin beams I pay thy pristine vow. 
O Queen ! I left thy head unwillingly — 
Unwillingly : yes, by thy head and thee ! 



BERONICE'S HAIR. 



Who slights this oath meet vengeance let him feel ; 
But who can dare oppose the might of steel ? 
By steel that mountain e'en was prostrate laid, 
The greatest Thia's radiant son survey'd, 
When Medan hosts a new sea form'd, and through ' 
Mid Athos swept the fierce barbarian crew ; 
How shall poor tresses, then, fell steel dare face ? 
Great Jove ! in ire blast all the Chalyb race, 
And him who first the embowell'd treasures tore 
From forth the earth, and steel'd the veined ore. 



The sister locks I left still mourn'd my fate, 

When Aethiop Memnon's brother, through heaven's 

gate 
Rushing, with quivering wings the ether clove, 
And to Arsinoe's shrine impetuous drove. 
He took me up : up through heaven's gloom he prest, 
And laid me down on Venus' spotless breast ; 
For Grecian Venus' self gave this command, 
Hight Zephyritis on Canopus' strand, 
That not alone, high in the star-gemm'd sky, 
On Ariadne's brow should man descry 
A golden crown, but that I too should shine, 
Even I, the golden curl that graced her shrine. 
She placed me here, still moist with many tears, 
A new-made star among the primal spheres ; 
Close by the Virgin and the Lion wild, 
To fierce Callisto near, Lycaon's child ; 
Westward I veer and slow Bootes guide, 
That hardly sinks at last in ocean's tide ; 



1 34 BERONICE 'S HA IR. 

Though down at 'night by feet immortal prest 

Dawn calls me back to fair-hair d Tethys' breast ; 

Yet — let me speak it, dread Rhamnusian maid, 

For I will speak the truth all undismay'd, 

And though with kindling ire the stars should seethe, 

The dictates of a truthful breast I '11 breathe — 

My lot so glads me not that I would be 

Thus rack'd and ever barr'd, dear Queen, from thee, 

With whom, a maid, I quafFd no scents divine ; — 

In wedlock ! gods ! what perfumes rare were mine. 

Ye whom the long'd-for bridal-torch doth bind 

To lords of loyal heart and kindred mind, 

Yield not to them, nor all your charms display, 

Till me sweet fee your onyx-boxes pay, 

Ye who desire a husband's chaste caress ; 

But let the gifts of foul adulteress, 

Ah ! loathsome offerings ! slake the shifting sand, 

No boon I crave from her unhallow'd hand. 

So more and more, ye brides, may concord reign, 

And love eternal in your homes remain. 

And, Queen ! when to the stars thine eyes thou ; lt turn, 
And, wooing Venus, festal torches burn, 
Oh, be not me, thine own, from unguents free, 
But dower me largely. Stars ! why hold ye me % 
Let me but grace once more that brow divine, 
Orion then may next Aquarius shine.* 

* Another rendering of the concluding lines of this poem, 
with special reference to the text of Ellis, will be found in the 
Notes. 



DIALOGUE, ETC. 135 



LXVII. 

DIALOGUE BETWEEN CATULLUS AND A 
DOOR. 

(From the text of Rossbach.) 

Catullus. Hail, door ! to husband and to parent 
dear, 
And thee may Jove with every blessing cheer ; 
'Tis said thou servedst Balbus well erewhile, 
When that old man possess'd this domicile; 
And that thou basely serv'dst his son again, 
When with his bride the aged wight had lain j 
Say, wherefore art thou deem'd so sadly changed, 
And from thine ancient faith so far estranged 1 

Door. No, (may it please Caecilius ! whose I 'm 
now,) 
Though mine 'tis call'd, the fault 's not mine, I trow, 
Nor e'er could mortal tax me with a sin, 
Though, sooth, the rabble make a hideous din, 
And when a fault 's committed, all combine, 
And shout at me : " Fie, door, the fault is thine." 

Catullus. Thy word alone is not enough for me ; 
Come, let me clearly understand and see. 

Door. How can I % no one asks or cares to know. 

Catullus. I do ; speak on ; away your scruples 
throw. 



136 DIALOGUE, ETC. 

Door. First, then, 'tis said, she here a virgin 
came ; 
Tis false : not that her lord had been to blame, 
For he, poor fellow, could not fail to prove 
A harmless warrior in the lists of love ; 
But his old sire caress'd the blooming spouse, 
And stain'd with infamy the ill-starr'd house ; 
Whether he burn'd with passion's lawless fire, 
Or thought his sterile son must needs require 
The help of one with stronger nerve and bone 
To loose the new-made spouse's maiden zone. 

Catullus. You tell a noble parent's pious deed, 
Good soul ! to help his son in time of need. 

Door. But not of this alone does Brixia speak ; 
Brixia, that lies 'neath dark-blue * mountain peak, 
Cleft by the yellow Mella's gentle wave, 
Brixia, that birth to my Verona gave, 
Tells of Posthumius' and Cornelius' fires 
With whom she gratified her dark desires. 

Catullus. "Come, door, how know'st all this?" 
some one may say, 
" Thou from thine owner's threshold may'st not stray, 
Nor hear the people talk, but night and day, 
Fix'd to this post, must back or forward sway V ' 

Door. Oft have I heard her tell, in furtive tone, 
Her crimes, when with her maidens all alone, 

* In the editions I have consulted, all the readings of this very 
obscure passage appear to me alike unsatisfactory. The second 
word of the line (32) is variously given, Ckinea, Chinaeae, 
Cenomanae, Echinaeae, Cygnea, Cycnea, Cycneae, &c. I have 
conjectured Cyaneae. 



EPISTLE TO MANLIUS. 137 

Naming the aforesaid ones, as if I here 
Kept swinging, gifted with nor tongue nor ear. 
She mentioned one besides who '11 nameless be, 
Lest he with bristling eyebrows scowl on me — 
A lean, lank fellow, once in law involved 
About a case of birth, he wanted solved. 



LXVIIL* 
EPISTLE TO MANLIUS. 

Oppress'd with woe and misery's crushing gloom, 

You send to me a letter writ in tears, 
Imploring help and rescue from the tomb, 

Like the wreck'd seaman who the wild waves fears ; 

To whom, on your lone, widow'd bed reclined, 
Nor holy Venus grants sweet rest by night, 

Nor doth the Muse your rest-robb'd anguish'd mind 
With the sweet strains of ancient bards delight. 

Your lines are dear, since there you call me friend, 
And ask the gifts of Friendship and the Muse ; 

But, lest you know not 'neath what woes I bend, 
Or think I could such sacred claims refuse ; 



138 EPISTLE TO MANLIUS. 

Manlius ! learn the ills that round me press, 
Plunged in the waves of sorrow's surging sea, 

Nor longer think the boons of happiness 

Can be obtam'd from hapless wretch like me. 

What time the vestment pure was round me thrown, 
In youth's glad spring all redolent of flowers, 

1 sported freely ; not to Her unknown 

Who blends sweet bitterness with cares of ours. 

Such thoughts thy woe-worn friend no more employ, 
Reft of a brother dear in manhood's bloom ; 

Brother ! thy death has marr'd my every joy, 
With thee our house's glory finds a tomb. 

With thee has perish'd every dear delight, 

Which o'er my life thy love's> sweet influence shed ; 

Thy death has merged my soul in rayless night, 
Each taste, each pleasure that I loved has fled. 

Why write me thenl " Catullus, 'tis a shame 
Your life should thus be in Verona led, 

While any gallant here of noble name 

May warm his chill limbs in your vacant bed." 

Manlius, 'tis not a shame : 'tis piteous, say ; 

And pardon me, if thee I do not send 
The gifts which grief from me has torn away ; 

They are not mine, nor on my will depend. 



TO ALL1US. 139 



Of writings here I have but scanty store — 

A few choice books to soothe my hours of care ; 

For Rome is still my home as heretofore, 

My dwelling-place — my thoughts — my all is there. 

Then think not I have thy requests denied 
From disingenuous soul or spiteful spleen ; 

Amply I w r ould have both thy wants supplied, 
Unask'd by thee, if mine the power had been. 



LXVIIL b 
TO ALLIUS. 

Ye Muses ! I cannot the meed withhold 
From Allius, for his help and loving zeal ; 

May fleeting years, to dark oblivion roll'd, 

Ne'er in night's dreary gloom his worth conceal. 

To you I sing. Do ye in after days 

To thousands yet unborn his name extol, 

And let this writing herald forth his praise, 
When it is reckon'd as an ancient scroll. 

And when he 's number'd with the silent dead, 
More and more glorious be his growing fame, 

Nor let the pendent spider ever spread 
Her airy web o'er his neglected name. 



I4-0 TO ALL/ US. 



Ye know how wily Venus plagued my life, 
And with resistless passion thrilPd my frame, 

When in my vitals warr'd the fiery strife, 
Fierce as Sicilian Aetna's scorching flame, 

Or as the boiling Malian springs that rise 

Within Thermopylae, by Oeta's hill, 
Griefs bitter tears ne'er ceased to blur mine eyes, 

Nor sorrow's stream ad own my cheek to trill. 

As crystal rill from mountain's airy crest 

Leaps from the mossy stone and valeward bounds. 

Then cuts the busy road — refreshment blest 

To way-worn wight when cracks the sun-baked 
grounds : 

And as to storm-toss'd sailor comes the fair 
And gentle breeze that calms the angry sea, 

From Pollux now, now Castor sought in prayer, 
So great a boon has Allius been to me. 

He gave me wider fields, a home, its queen — 
Our love — my radiant goddess thither bore 

Her sandall'd fairy foot with graceful mien, 
And made sweet music on my household floor. 

Thus warm Laodamia sought of old 
Protesilaus' home, ah ! sought in vain, 

For never there the sacred blood had roll'd, 
Of victim to the blest immortals slain. 



TO ALLIUS. 141 



May'ne'er be mine, Rhamnusian maiden stern, 
While heaven denies, desires inordinate ; 

How thirstily for blood the altars yearn 
Laodamia learn'd, alas ! too late. 

Forced from her young lord's loving arms to part, 
Ere in their laggard nights two winters view'd 

Love's brimming chalice sate her eager heart, 
That she might live in weary widowhood. 

Well knew the fates that doom not distant far, 
If he in arms to Ilium's walls should go, 

For Helen's rape had roused the trump of war, 
And call'd the Argive chiefs to face the foe. 



Fell Ilium ! Europe's, Asia's common tomb, 
Troy ! cruel grave of all that 's brave and true, 

'Twas there my brother fell by ruthless doom, 
Whose loss I 'm left in bitterness to rue. 

Brother, thou 'rt gone ; alas ! life's gladsome light ! 

With thee the glory of our house is dead ; 
With thee has perish'd every dear delight 

Which o'er my life thy love's sweet influence shed. 

'Mong nameless graves thou liest, far away, 
Near kindred dust placed by no kindly hand ; 

But Troy, foul, baleful Troy, detains thy clay, 
Thy grave a foreign clime's remotest strand ! 



142 TO ALLIUS. 



Thither then hastening, all the youth of Greece, 
From hearth and home, in crowds innumerous sped, 

That Paris with his stolen quean in peace 
Might not enjoy a quiet bridal bed. 

Thus wast thou reft, incomparable bride, 
Of what than life and soul was sweeter bliss, 

Love's all-absorbing, wildly-eddying tide 
Had suck'd thee down a fathomless abyss, 

Vast as by Cyllene Pheneus was the one 

That drain' d the fertile soil — a marsh before — 

And which Amphitryon's falsely-father'd son 
Dug in the bowels of the hill of yore, 

When he by meaner lord's behest had driven 

'Gainst the Stymphalian pests the shafts of doom, 

That one god more might tread the courts of heaven, 
Nor Hebe linger long in maiden bloom. 

Far deeper than that gulf thine own deep love, 
That taught thee, all untaught, the yoke to bear, 

Nor e'er did aged grandsire's deeper prove 
When first he hail'd his long-expected heir/' 



* Or, according to other texts : — 

But thy deep love exceeded far the abyss 

That taught a servile god the yoke to bear, 
Nor e'er had aged grandsire equal bliss 

When first he hail'd his long-expected heir, 



TO ALU US. 143 



And blest his only daughter's late-born boy, 
Who, in his will recorded in their stead, 

Blasting his baffled kinsmen's impious joy, 
Scares off the vultures from his hoary head. 

Nor ever joy'd so in her snowy mate 

The dove, with billing blisses ne'er content, 

Whose eager love, 'tis said, no joys can sate, 
Though for inconstancy pre-eminent. 

Great are the loves of these, but nought beside 

Thy matchless love, Laodamia fair, 
When thou in wedlock's bonds becam'st the bride 

Of thy dear husband of the golden hair. 

In nought or little less in charms the maid, 

My love ! my life ! came bounding to my breast, 

Round whom oft Cupid, hovering glory -ray'd, 
Effulgent shone, in saffron tunic drest. 

And though she may not live for me alone, 
Few are the falsehoods of my modest maid ; 

Then let me bear them as to me unknown, 
Nor like a fool her broken faith parade. 

Oft Juno, mightiest of the powers above, 

Burn'd for her lord, though daily slights she bare, 

For well she knew the amours of roving Jove ; 
But gods with men 'tis impious to compare. 



144 TO ALLIUS. 



Still let me ne'er her anxious parent dread, 
Nor to my ears his peevish grumblings come, 

For not by father's right hand was she led 
Into my Syrian-odour-scented home : 

But on that wondrous night the charms her lord 
Of right deserved, on me she lavish'd free ; 

Enough : if she with whiter stone record 
The hours she consecrates to love and me. 

Allius ! for many kindnesses I give 

The best return I can, this friendly lay, 

That with foul rust unstain'd thy name may live 
Upon my page for ever and for aye. 

What gifts of old to Virtue Themis paid, 

With these a gracious heaven thy days will cheer, 

Then blest be thou, and blest thy life-dear maid, 
Our home of pleasure and its mistress dear. 

And blest be he who added to my life 

The gift of friendship, when he added thee ; 

But yet more blest and dear my more than wife, 
Light of my eyes, whose love is life to me. 



INCONSTANCY OF WOMAN'S LOVE. 145 



LXIX. 

TO RUFUS. 

Wonder not, Rufus, why no maiden fair 

Will have your love or let your arms come near her, 

Not though you tempt her with a vestment rare, 
Or lovely gem than sparkling water clearer. 

A certain ugly story damns your suit ; 

A buck-goat lurks, 'tis said, your arm-pits under ; 
The girls all fear {he horrid, grewsome brute — 

For so he is — and, really, 'tis no wonder. 

No longer deem it strange they 're cold and coy, 
For till he 's gone not one will venture nigh you • 

At once this shocking nasal pest destroy, 

Or cease to wonder why the maidens fly you. 



LXX. 



ON THE INCONSTANCY OF WOMAN'S 
LOVE. 

Lesbia declares she 'd marry none but me, 
Not even Jove, should he her wooer be ; 
She says so : but on wind and rapid wave 
A woman's troth to her fond swain engrave. 

K 



146 TO LESBIA. 



LXXL 

TO VIRRO. 

If e'er to worthy's lot befell 

The grievance of a goatish smell ; 

If e'er poor mortal limp'd about 

A martyr to the racking gout ; 

Your lucky rival, on my oath, 

Has got a glorious share of both. 

So, oft as with your love he 's lain, 

You 've had your vengeance on the twain 

His odour well-nigh chokes the fair, 

His gout is more than man can bear. 






LXXIL 

TO LESBIA. 

O Lesbia ! once thou didst declare 

Catullus only had thy love ; 
That thou his lot would st rather share 
Than win the heart of Jove. 

How pure that love of mine the while ! 

It was not like the vulgar fires 
That kindle at the wanton's wile, 
But holy as a sire's. 



ON AN INGRA TE. 1 47 

I know thee now : and though I glow 

With passion wilder than before, 
To me thou 'rt vile and fallen low, 

My soul's delight no more. 

How can it be i thy faithless ways, 

So grievous in a lover's sight, 
Make passion's torch more fiercely blaze, 
But dim love's holy light. 



LXXIIL 

ON AN INGRATE. 

Oh ! cease to wish from any one a kindly thought to 

merit, 
Or yet to think you can inspire a meek and grateful 

spirit ; 
All are ungrateful 3 all, alas ! kind deeds avail us 

nothing ; 
Nay, more, they rather weary, cloy, and lead to utter 

loathing ; 
For he in fierce and bitter hate to no sworn foe is 

second, 
Who lately had in me the one, the only friend he 

reckon'd. 



1/p ' TO LESBIA. 



LXXIV. 

ON GELLIUS. 

"Gellius had heard his uncle used to scold, 
If he of wanton word or deed was told ; 
To save himself, he kiss'd his uncle's wife, 
And render'd him Harpocrates for life. 
He gain'd his point : for, do whate'er he may, 
His uncle now has not a word to say. 



LXXV. 

TO LESBIA. 

Lesbia ! no woman e'er was loved 

As thou hast been by me ; 
No plighted troth has ever proved 

So true as mine to thee. 

But now the cruel faithlessness 

That in thy breast I find, 
Has shaken the devotedness 

I cherish' d in my mind : 

So that I cannot love thee well, 

Though spotless thou shouldst shine ; 

Nor fond love's doting thoughts dispel, 
Though every fault were thine. 



TO HIMSELF, ETC. 149 

LXXVI. 
TO HIMSELF.— THE LOVER'S PETITION. 

If past good deeds, — if an unsullied fame, 

Unbroken faith, and fair integrity, 
That ne'er to wrong mankind abused heaven's name, 

Wake in the breast of man sweet memory ; 

Then for long years to thee rich joys are due, 
Catullus, from this love, ah ! ilkrepaid ; 

For all that man could either say or do, 

With kindliest heart, by thee was done and said ; 

Yet all was lost upon the thankless fair ; — 

Why more with tortures, then, be rack'd and riven r ( 

Come, steel thy heart, withdraw thee from the snare, 
And cease to be a wretch in spite of heaven. 

'Tis hard to quench at once a long-nursed love ; 

'Tis hard — but do it howsoe'er you may • 
It is your only chance — your courage prove — 

Easy or difficult — you must obey. 

Ye gods ! if pity in your bosoms dwell, 

Or if to man ye e'er deliverance bear 
When death's dark whelming billows round him swell, / 

Oh ! look on me, and hear a wretch's prayer ; 



150 TO RUFUS. 



And, if a stainless life the boon may claim, 

Oh ! pluck from me this canker-worm and pest, 

Which, like a torpor creeping through my frame, 
Has banish'd every pleasure from my breast. 

I ask not that she should return my love, 
Or e'en be chaste — for that can never be : 

Grant me but health, this fell disease remove, 
Ye gods ! with this repay my piety. 



LXXVII. 
TO RUFUS. 

Rufus ! how fruitless and how vain 

My trust in thee : 
Fruitless 1 nay, fraught with heavy gain 

Of woe to me. 

Like reptile vile into my breast 
Didst thou thus stray, 

And, wearing out my vitals, wrest 
My all away ! 

Alas ! my every joy thou 'st ta'en, 

Life's upas-tree ! 
Alas, alas ! my friendship's bane ! 

Woe ! woe is me ! 



ON GALLUS. 151 



Oh, now I grieve the spotless lip 

Of one so true 
Was ever lured by thee to sip 

Thy mouth's foul dew. 

Thou 'It rue thy deed : all time in scorn 
Shall hold thy name, 

And hoary fame to years unborn 
Shall speak thy shame. 



LXXVIII. 
ON GALLUS. 

Gallus has two brothers : one 
Has a charming wife, 

And the other has a son 
Full of mirth and life. 

Gallus is a wag : and why ? 

He, to crown their joy, 
Gets the charming wife to lie 

With the charming boy. 

Gallus is a fool : and, vext, 
He will scratch his head, 

Should he find his nephew next 
With his wife a-bed. 



IS 2 TO GELLIUS. 



LXXIX. 

ON LESBIUS. 

Lesbius is fair : why not ? in Lesbia's love, 
Catullus ! thee and all thy race above : 
Yet me and all my kindred let him sell 
If he but find three men to wish him well. 



LXXX. 
TO GELLIUS. 

Gellius ! why are thy lips, once rosy red, 

Hueless and paler than the winter snows, 
Whether from home at early morn thou 'st sped, 

Or left thy couch from noontide's sweet repose 1 
I know not. Or is rumour's whisper true, 

That wanton joys your whole time occupy] 
These pale the lips, how fresh soe'er their hue, 

And dim the lustre of the brightest eye. 
[But now I grieve my pure girl's pure lips e'er 

Imbibed the slaver of a wretch like thee. 
Thou ? lt rue it : ages on thy name shall bear, 

And hoary fame declare thine infamy.] 



TO A BEAUTY. 1 53 



LXXXI. 

TO A BEAUTY. 

Fair maid ! among 
So vast a throng 

Couldst thou descry 
No other swain, 
Whom thou couldst deign 

With love to eye, 

Than that low scamp, 
From out the damp 

Pisauran vale % 
The gilded sheen 
Of bust, I ween, 

Was ne'er so pale. 

He now enchains 
Thy heart, and reigns 

Preferr'd to me. 
Thy error, oh ! 
Thou dost not know, 

Alas for thee ! 



154 ON THE HUSBAND OF LESB1A. 



LXXXIL 

TO QUINTIUS. 

Quintius ! if thou wouldst have me owe to thee 
Mine eyes, or aught, if aught 's more dear to me, 
Snatch not from me my soul's far dearer prize, 
If aught there be still dearer than mine eyes. 



LXXXIIL 
ON THE HUSBAND OF LESBIA. 

Lesbia says many ill things of me when her husband 
is present ; 

This to the poor silly fool is a thing most uncommonly 
pleasant ; 

Mule ! you don't see it all : if silent she were and for- 
getful, 

Free from love she might be ; but now that she storms 
and is fretful, 

She not remembers me only, but, what is a thing far 
severer, 

Angry she is, so she burns, and still speaks of me : 
What can be clearer? 



ON HIS LOVE. 155 



LXXXIV. 

ON ARRIUS. 

Arrius commodious aye chommodious call'd, 

And for insidious out hinsidious bawl'd, 

And then he thought his accent wondrous good 

When he had mouth'd them rough as e'er he could. 

His mother, and his uncle Liber, too, 

And their good parents thus, methinks, would do. 

He went to Syria, — all our ears had then 

A sweet repose, — smooth flow'd the words again, 

Vanish'd the fears that put us nigh distraught, 

When, suddenly, the direful news was brought, 

That Arrius, when in Syria, said that he 

Just came from crossing the Hionian Sea. 



LXXXV. 
ON HIS LOVE. 

I hate and love. " Why do I so V 
Perhaps you ask. I can't explain : 

The bitter fact I only know, 
And torture racks my brain. 



156 QUINTIA AND LESBIA COMPARED. 



LXXXV. 

(another version.) 

I hate and love. Why so % I cannot tell : 
I feel it ; and endure the pains of hell. 



LXXXVI. 
QUINTIA AND LESBIA COMPARED. 

Quintia I know the many rate 

A gem of loveliness ; 
To me she 's fair, and tall, and straight, 

These singly I confess \ 

But I that wondrous whole deny, 

Its line I fail to trace ; 
For where in that great figure lie 

The piquancy and grace % ' 

Lesbia is lovely ; she so rare — 

So beautiful withal, 
Robb'd ail her sex of all things fair, 

To wear the coronal. 



ON GELLIUS. 157 



LXXXVIL TRANSLATED IN LXXV. 



LXXXVIII. 

ON GELLIUS. 

Gellius ! know'st thou the awful wickedness 
Of him who yields to incest's mad caress % 
'Tis such that all the waters of the main 
Can ne'er obliterate the monstrous stain. 
No guilt, how dark soe'er it be, can stretch 
Beyond the baseness of the abandon'd wretch. 



LXXXIX. 
ON GELLIUS. 

Gellius is thin : and what wonder % when he 
Has so blithe and so buxom a mother, 

And a sister as lovely as maiden can be, 

Sooth ! 'twould beat you to find such another. 

And then he 's an uncle so good and so green, 
And of she-cousins such a bright bevy, 

'Twould rather be strange if he were not so lean, 
Their demands on him must be so heavy. 



158 ON GELLIUS. 



For although he should never a woman embrace 
Save the very same ones he should never, 

You '11 find good enough reason, I trow, why his face 
Should be lean and still leaner than ever. 



XC. 

ON GELLIUS. 

Let Gellius' and his mother's lust be crown' d 
With one who shall the Persians' creed expound, 
For Magian must from son and mother rise, 
If truth in Persia's vile religion lies ; 
To venerate with accents meet heaven's name, 
And melt the fat omentum in the flame. 



XCI. 

ON GELLIUS. 

No, Gellius ! never did I hope thou 'dst prove 
Faithful in this my wretched, frenzied love, 
Because I knew thee well, nor thought thy mind 
Could be restrain'd from vice of any kind, 
But that my ardent love — 'twas this alone — 
Was nursed for no relation of thine own ; 



ON CAESAR. 1 59 



And though I knew thee well, I never dream* d 
That thou wouldst this a fit pretext have deem'd. 
Thou thought'st so : such with thee is vice's gust, 
That nothing 'scapes thy foul, insatiate lust. 



XCIL 

ON LESBIA. 

Lesbia rails against me ever, 
And of me is silent never, 

May I die if Lesbia loves me not sincerely. 
Why ? Don't I do the same. 
And aye malign her name % 

But may I die if I don't love her dearly. 



XCIIL 

ON CAESAR. 

To please you, Caesar, I don't care one plack, 
Nor care I whether you are white or black. 



l6o ON "SMYRNA" A POEM BY CINNA. 



XCIV. 

ON MAMURRA. 

Mamurra sins : Mamurra is a sot : 

The proverb 's true : Herbs grow to fill the pot. 



xcv. 

ON " SMYRNA/' A POEM BY CINNA. 

Nine harvests since was Cinna's work begun, 
Nine winters see at last his "Smyrna" done; 
Whereas Hortensius, in a single year, 
Throws off five hundred thousand verses clear. 
" Smyrna" will charm where Satrachus doth roll, 
And times unborn will read the laboured scroll ; 
Volusius' Annals shall in Padua die, 
Or in its shops for mackerel wrappers lie : 
My friend's small labours to my heart are dear, 
Turgid Antimachus the mob may cheer. 



ON A EMI LI US. 161 



XCVI. 

TO CALVUS, ON THE DEATH OF 
QUINTILIA. 

Calvus ! if from our grief aught can accrue 
The silent dead to solace or to cheer, 

When fond regret broods o'er old loves anew, 
And o'er lost friendships sheds the bitter tear 

Oh ! then her grief at death's untimely blow 
To thy Quintilia far, far less must prove 

Than the pure joy her soul must feel, to know 
Thy true, unchanging, ever-during love. 



XCVII. 

ON AEMILIUS. 

By heaven ! without a word of jesting, 
I really could not help protesting, 
Were I desired to kiss that flunkey : 
Egad ! I 'd rather kiss a monkey ! 
His mouth, you see, is not the cleanest, 
His tout-ensemble is the meanest ; 

L 



1 62 TO VETTIUS. 



But, if I needs must kiss the noddy, 
I 'd choose some portion of his body- 
Where grinders did not stare before me, 
Like lethal weapons meant to gore me. 
Teeth ! why their length is full six inches ; 
Gums ! like a pair of rotten benches ; 
Besides, when he is grinning, marry ! 
The orificie is like a quarry. 
Yet he to this or that cit's daughter 
Pays court, and proudly boasts he's caught her, 
Whereas the dolt, exiled from lasses, 
Should drive the mill with kindred asses ; 
The girl who for her mate would choose him 
Might take a hangman to her bosom. 



XCVIII. 
TO VETTIUS. 

All that is said to fools and prattlers dire, 
O foul-mouth' d Vettius ! may be said to you, 

For with that tongue of yours, should need require, 
You 'd lick the cow-boy's filth-bedabbled shoe. 

If ruin fell on all you wish to send, 

Just wag your tongue : you 're sure to gain your end 1 



THE KISS.— TO A BEAUTY. 1 63 

XCIX. 
THE KISS.— TO A BEAUTY. 

Fair honey'd maid ! the while you play'd 

I stole a little kiss, 
And sweet ambrosia could not match 

The sweetness of my bliss. 

For that fond raid I dearly paid, 

For hourly more and more, 

What pains the cross-naiPd wretch endures, 
Such agonies I bore. 

I pleaded love — in vain I strove ; 

No grief, no tears of mine 
Could drive away one jot of that 

Hard-heartedness of thine. 

Whene'er 'twas done, too cruel one ! 

Thy little lips were rinsed, 
And by each finger of thy hand 

With every effort cleansed, 

Till not a trace on thy sweet face 

From lip of mine remain'd, 
As if some vicious profligate 

Its purity had stain'd. 



164 ON COELIUS AND QUINTIUS. 

Nay more : thy spite 'tis thy delight 
In every way to vent, 

And never hast thou ceased my heart 
To torture and torment. 

That this wee kiss might smack of bliss 
Ambrosian never more, 

But be more bitter to my soul 
Than bitter hellebore. 

Since such the pains thy heart ordains 
To my sad love, I swear, 

I '11 never steal a kiss again, 

Nor tamper with the fair. 



ON COELIUS AND QUINTIUS. 

Young Coelius and Quintius, the beauty 
And flower of the Veronese youth, 

To two sisters are paying love's duty — 
A bond right fraternal, in sooth. 

Whose suit shall my best wish attend ? 

Thine, Coelius ! for thou wast well tried 
At the time I most needed a friend : 

Then, Coelius, be blest in thy bride. 



A T HIS BROTHER 'S GRA VE. 1 65 

CI. 

THE POET AT HIS BROTHER'S GRAVE. 

Brother ! o'er many lands and oceans borne, 
I reach thy grave, death's last sad rite to pay ; 
To call thy silent dust in vain, and mourn, 
Since ruthless fate has hurried thee away : 
Woe 's me ! yet now upon thy tomb I lay, 
All soak'd with tears for thee, thee loved so well, 
What gifts our fathers gave the honour' d clay 
Of valued friends ; take them, my grief they tell : 
And now, for ever hail ! for ever fare-thee-well ! 



CI. 

(From the text of Schwabe.) 

Borne over many a land and many a sea, 

Brother ! I reach thy gloom-wrapt grave to pay 

The last sad office thou may'st claim from me, 
And all in vain address thy silent clay : 

For thou art gone — fell fate that from me tore 
Thee, thee, my brother ! ah, too cruel thought ! 

I '11 call thee, but I '11 never hear thee more 

Recount the deeds thy valiant arm hath wrought. 



1 66 TO CORNELIUS. 

And I shall never see thy face again, 
Dearer than life ; yet in my heart alway 

Assuredly shall fond affection reign, 

And aye with grief's wan hues I '11 tinge my lay : 

Yea, even as the Daulian bird her song 
Outpours in accents sweetly-dolorous, 

When o'er the branch-gloom'd river, all night long, 
She wails the fate of perish'd Itylus. 

Yet now what gifts our sires in ancient years 

Paid those with whom in life they loved to dwell, 

Accept : — all streaming with thy brother's tears ; 
And, brother ! hail for aye ! for aye farewell ! 



GIL 
TO CORNELIUS. 

If e'er true friend a secret dared disclose 
To silent friend of known fidelity, 

Thou 'It find me of the brotherhood of those ; 
Harpocrates could not more silent be. 



ON MAMURRA. 167 



cm. 

TO SILO. 

Silo ! return my hundred pounds, I pray, 
Then be as fierce and savage as you may : 
Or cease, if money 's all in all to you, 
To be a pimp, and fierce and savage too. 



CIV. 
ON LESBIA. 

What ! / my love, my very life malign, 

Who 's dearer far to me than both mine eyes ? 

No : that could never be with love like mine, 
But you with Tappo frame a world of lies. 



CV. 

ON MAMURRA. 

Mamurra fain would soar to Pimpla's crown, 
The Muses with their pitchforks chuck him down. 



1 68 TO LESBIA. 



CVI. 

ON AN AUCTIONEER AND A PRETTY 
GIRL. 

Whoever sees a salesman with a belle 

Must surely think he 's brought her out to sell. 



CVIL 
TO LESBIA.— THE RECONCILIATION. 

If e'er that wish which mortal holds most dear 
Hath by his eager, longing heart been gain'd, 

When not a gleam of hope remain'd to cheer ; 

The boon how sweet ! the pleasure how unfeign'd ! 

Such is the sweet, unfeign'd delight I feel — 

Which wealth of glittering gold could ne'er impart — 

To know my Lesbia, reconciled and leal, 
Will now be pressed to my enraptured heart. 

To my fond arms, and of thine own accord, 
Thou comest after hope's last ray had fled ; 

A whiter mark shall the pure bliss record, 
This happy day upon my life hath shed. 



TO LESBIA. 169 



Who is there boasts a happier fate than mine % 
Or rather, where is he would not declare 

The lot that binds my destiny with thine, 
Compared with that of others, passing fair ? 



CVIIL 

ON COMINIUS. 

If thy impure gray hairs to death should be, 
Cominius, doom'd by popular decree. 
I trow that first thy tongue, that loathes the good, 
Cut out, should glut the vulture's ravenous brood ; 
Thine eyes should gorge the raven's sable maw ; 
Dogs should thy bowels, wolves the remnants gnaw. 



CIX. 

TO LESBIA. 

My life ! thou swear'st no trials e'er shall change 
Our honey'd love, nor years our hearts estrange. 
Truth to her vows, Almighty Heaven ! impart ; 
Oh, be her words sincere, and from the heart ; 
That all our lives our souls may faithful prove 
In this eternal bond of holy love. 



170 TO AUFILENA. 



CX. 
TO AUFILENA. 

O Aufil^ne, we Ve ever seen 
True, honest sweethearts praised, 

Our gifts they take, nor lightly break 
The darling hopes they've raised. 

Oh, 'twas unfair in thee to swear 
Thou 'dst give a kiss to me ; 

My gift to take, and then to break 
Thy word : 'twas base in thee. 

An honest maid had not delay'd 
The payment sweet to bring \ 

A modest queen might not have been 
So quick in promising. 

To prowl for prey, and skulk away, 
Smacks of the wanton's art, 

Who 's ever fain, for paltry gain, 
To play the meanest part. 



TO CINNA. 171 



CXI. 
TO AUFILENA. 

O Aufilena ! 'tis a wife's best praise, 

Pleased with one lord to live and love no other ; 
But if you needs must stray from virtue's ways, 

Oh, never, never be your cousins' mother. 



CXIL 

TO NASO. 

Naso, thou 'rt great, as greatness goes with thee : 
Naso, thou 'rt great in lust and infamy. 



CXIII. 

TO CINNA. 

Cinna, when Pompey first was consul, none 
Save two as Mucia's paramours were known ; 
In Pompey's second consulship each one 
Could count his pupils to a thousand grown ; 
This crop full well repays the sower's toil : 
The seed will spring and thrive in any soil. 



I7 2 ON MAMURRA. 



CXIV. 
ON MAMURRA. 

Mamurra ! justly, from your lands, 
You 're deem'd a wealthy lord ; 

For all that lordly wealth commands 
Your Formian fields afford. 

Fishes, beasts, birds of every breed, 
Plough'd fields and meadow grounds ; 

Tis all in vain : your debts exceed 
Your fortune's utmost bounds. 

I grant your income may be great : 
Want holds you aye in thrall ; 

The owner of a fine estate ! 
A beggar with it all ! 



cxv. 

ON MAMURRA. 

Formian of thirty acres is possest 
In meadow-land ; ploughed, forty ; seas the rest : 
Why is he not in wealth o'er Croesus crown'd ? 
Such countless stores he reckons at a bound : 



TO GELLIUS. 



173 



Meads, fields, vast woods, lawns, marshy grounds be- 
side, 
Far as the frozen North, as Ocean wide. 
All these are great : yet yield to him they must ; 
A man ! oh, no : a universe of lust ! 



CXVI. 



TO GELLIUS. 

Oft have I wished the lays of Battus' son 
To send for thee with studious mind to con, 
That I might calm thy bitter spleen, and stay 
The darts thou hurlest at my head alway. 
O Gellius ! now I see my toil was vain, 
And that my prayers had fail'd thine ear to gain 
'Neath my strong mail I '11 shun thy every dart, 
But mine shall pierce and lacerate thy heart. 




EXCURSUS 



AND 



ILLUSTRATIVE NOTES. 



EXCURSUS 



ILLUSTRATIVE NOTES. 



Poem I. 



Catullus modestly dedicates his little work (lepidum 
novum libellum) to his friend and fellow-countryman 
Cornelius Nepos, author of u Lives of Illustrious Com- 
manders," and a " Universal History/' in three books. 
The latter work, which was probably given to the world 
about B.C. 50, has perished. 

Carm. I. v. 9.* 

O patrona Virgo, 

Virgo= Minerva. 
Cf. Hor. Epist. ad Pisones, 385. 

Tu nihil invita dices faciesVe Minerva. 



* Iri giving the parallel notes reference is made throughout to 
the lines of the original. 

M 



178 EXCURSUS AND 



Poems II. and III. 

These two exquisite little poems have been the admira- 
tion of scholars and men of taste both in ancient and 
modern times. The playful tenderness, delicacy, and 
inimitable grace which they evince throughout impart to 
them a special charm. 

The following short poem by Martial, (Epigr. i. no,) 
though by no means equal to either of the famous songs 
of Catullus, is nevertheless one of the prettiest of the 
many " Nugae canorae" in imitation of the " Sparrow :" — 

Issa than Catullus' sparrow 

Far more frolic is, 
Issa 's purer, purer far, oh ! 

Than the dove's pure kiss ; 
Blander far than maiden fair, 
Than the gems of Ind more rare, 
Issa ! Issa ! darling bright, 
Issa, Publius' delight. 

If you heard pet Issa whimper 

You would think she spake, 
Grief and joy her whine and simper 

Tell beyond mistake. 
On his neck her nap she takes, 
Not a breath the silence breaks, 
All so still and cosily 
Does his charming Issa lie. 

With entreating paw she taps you, 

And the darling pup 
Prays, " put me to bed," " perhaps you 

Now will raise me up." 
Innocence's paragon ! 
Love her heart hath never known, 
Nor have we discover'd yet 
Lover worthy of our pet. 



ILL US TEA TIVE NO TES. 1 79 

Publius, lest death should strike her, 

Had her painted ; lo ! 
You'll see Issa limn'd so like her 

That you could not know. 
Place her by the picture there, 
I aver you will declare 
You 've two living Issas seen, 
Or that both have painted been. 

Carm. II. v. 13. 

Quod zonam soluit diu ligatum. 

Thus imitated in the " Priapeia," (Anthologia Latina, Carm. 
1704. Edit. Meyer) : — 

Te vocant prece virgines pudicae, 

Zonulam ut soliias diu ligatam. 

Carm. III. v. 5. 

Quern plus ilia oculis suis amabat. 
Cf. Theoc. Idyll, xi. 53:— 

Kcu tqv ev* 6(pda\fA6i>, rcD {mol yXvKepurepov ovdev. 

V. 13-15. 

At abstulistis. 

Cf. Ov. Amor. ii. 6, 37-40. 

Occidit ille loquax, humanae vocis imago 
Psittacus, extremo munus ab orbe datum. 

Optima prima fere manibus rapiuntur avaris, 
Implentur numeris deteriora suis. 

Dead ! my pretty chatterer, 

That mimick'd human sounds, 
Parrot ! sent to me ye were 

From earth's remotest bounds ; 
Ever first our fairest joy 

By ruthless hand is ta'en ; 
Countless things of base alloy 

Are fated to remain. 



180 EXCURSUS AND 

And Bion, Idyll, i. 55. 

rode irav kclKov es <r£ Karappei. 

V. 17, 18. Tua ocelli. 

Cf. Mart. Epigr. vii. 14: — 

Oh I a dire misfortune, Aulus, 

Comes my charmer's joys to blight ; 

She has lost her darling playmate, 
She has lost her heart's delight. 

Such the tender bard Catullus' 
Lovely Lesbia did not mourn, 

In the frolic little sparrow 
From her fond caresses torn ; 

Or my Stella, in the dove that 

Cost Ian this many a tear, 
And which now throughout Elysium 

Flits, a shadow dark and drear. 

Ne'er such trifles, ne'er such playthings 
Won my lovely charmer's heart ; 

Never did her tender bosom 
From such trivial losses smart. 

She has lost a youth of twenty 
Summers, all his peers above, 

Who had never learn'd to wander 
In the fairy realms of love. 

Mart. Epigr. xiv. 77. " Cavea eborea." 

Si tibi talis erit, qualem dilecta Catullo 
Lesbia plorabat, hie habitare potest. 
If yours a sparrow such as Lesbia, dear 
To young Catullus, mourn'd, confine it here. 

Juvenal alludes to this poem, Sat. vi. 7, 8: — 

haud similis tibi, Cynthia, nee tibi, cujus 

Turbavit nitidos extinctus passer ocellos. 



ILL USTRA TIVE NO TES. 1 8 1 



Poem IV. 

Catullus sings the praises of the yacht in which he 
sailed home from Amastris to Sirmio. He had just com- 
pleted his tour to the famous cities of Asia, after leaving 
Bithynia, whither he had gone in the company of the 
Praetor Caius Memmius Gemellus. In the present poem 
he mentions the principal places in the course of his 
voyage in inverted order (verses 6-10), and, after eulo- 
gising the sea-worthiness of his yacht, concludes by dedi- 
cating her to the twin-gods Castor and Pollux, determined 
that he shall not again expose her to the dangers of the 
deep, but allow her to enjoy an honoured age on the 
waters of Benacus (Lago di Garda). 

Carm. IV. v. 9-1 1. 

Ponticum silva. 

Cf. Hor. Od. i. 14, 11-13. 

Quamvis Pontica pinus, 
Silvae filia nobilis, 
Jactes et genus et nomen inutile. 

V. 11, 12. 

nam Cytorio in jugo 

Loquente saepe sibilum edidit coma. 

Cf. Theoc. Idyll, i. I :— 

'Add rt to ipLdvpLo~jj,a teal a irirvs. 

And Virg. Eel. v. 28. 

silvaeque loquuntur. 

V. 13. Amastri Pontica et Cytore buxifer. 

Amastris, so called from the niece of Darius, the last king 
of Persia, and wife of Dionysius, tyrant of Heraclea, anciently 
Sesamos, now Amasserah, was situated on the shores of the 
Pontus Euxinus (Black Sea), a few miles to the east of the Par- 



1 82 EXCURSUS AND 

thenius. A little to the east of it was Cytorus (Kidros), at the 
foot of Mount Cytorus {Afar Dag), famous for boxwood (buxi- 
fer.) 

Virg. Geor. ii. 437. 

Et juvat undantem buxo spectare Cytorum. 



Poem V. 
Catullus calls on Lesbia to come and enjoy with him 
the delights of love. From the closing lines of the poem 
he seems to have been a believer in the popular super- 
stition of all ages and countries — the blasting power of 
envy. 

Carm. V. v. 1. 

Vivamus, mea Lesbia, atque amemus. 

Cf. Tibull. i. i, 69-72. 

Interea, dum fata sinunt, jungamus amores : 
Jam veniet tenebris Mors adoperta caput, 
Jam subrepet iners aetas, neque amare decebit, 
Dicere nee cano blanditias capiti. 

Love's joys be ours while still the fates allow, 
Soon death will come with darkly -mantled head, 

Dull age creeps on ; and love-kiss or love- vow 
Beseems no forehead, where its snows are shed. 

And Prop. hi. 7, 23-26 (ii. 15, 23-26.) 

Dum nos fata sinunt, oculos satiemus amore, 

Nox tibi longa venit nee reditura dies. 
Atque utinam haerentes sic nos vincire catena 
Velles, ut nunquam solveret ulla dies ! 

While fate allows, let love our fond eyes sate, 
A long night comes, and no returning day ; 



ILL USTRA TIVE NO TES. 1 83 

Oh, would that love around us both might plait 
A clasping chain that will endure for aye ! 

V. 4-6. Soles dormienda. 

Cf. Hor. iv. 7, 13-16. 

Damna tamen celeres reparant caelestia lunae ; 

Nos, ubi decidimus, 
Quo pius Aeneas, quo dives Tullus et Ancus, 
Pulvis et umbra sumus. 

The fleet moons wane again to gem the sky ; 

But we, when we are laid 
Where good Aeneas, Tullus, Ancus lie, 

Are only dust and shade. 

Mosch. Idyll, iii. 109-111. 

' AfJLjj.es 5' 6l fxeyahoL kclI KaprepoL, 6l ccxpol avdpes 
'07nroT€ irpara ddvojfxes, clv&kooi ev x^ 0Vl ^oiXa 
"Kvdofxes eu /xdXa \xo.Kpbv drep/xova vfjyperov virvov. 

But we, the great, the brave, the wise of men, 
When we have pass'd away from mortal ken, 
Must slumber in earth's hollow chamber housed, 
One long eternal night, unheard-of, unaroused. 

And Burns — 

Cheerless night that knows no morrow. 

V. 7. Da mihi basia mille, 6cc. 

Cf. Chaucer, " Wyf of Bathes Tale"— 

And whan the knyght saugh verrayly al this 
That sche so fair was and so yong therto, 
For joye he hent hir in his armes two, 
His herte bathid in a bath of blisse, 
A thousand tyme on rowe he gan hir kisse. 

Mart. xi. 6, 14-16. 

Da mihi basia sed Catulliana : 

Quae si tot fuerint, quot ille dixit, 

Donabo tibi passerem Catulli. 
Now give me kisses such as Lesbia lipp'd, 
And young Catullus erst divinely sipp'd, 



1 84 EXCURSUS AND 

And, if his countless number should be mine, 
I vow Catullus' sparrow shall be thine. 

Id. xii. 59, 1-3. 

Tantum dat tibi Roma basiorum 
Post annos modo quindecim reverso, 
Quantum Lesbia non dedit Catullo. 

Fifteen years away — now Rome 

My. lips does with her kisses cumber ; 

Lesbia, aye in love at home, 

Ne'er gave Catullus half the number. 

V. 13. Cum tantum sciat esse basiorum. 

Imitated in the Priapeia, 52, 12. (Anth. Lat, Meyer, 1667.) 
Cum tantum hie sciet esse mentularum. 



Poem VI. 



Catullus rallies his friend Flavius on the object of his 
affections, and in a humorous effusion entreats him to 
tell him her name, that he may embalm them both in a 
lively lay. 

Of Flavius nothing whatever is known. 

Carm. VI. v. 15, 16. Quare nobis. 

Cf. Hor. Od. i. 27, 17. 

Quid quid habes, age, 
Depone tutis auribus. 



ILL USTRA TIVE NO TES. 1 8 5 



Poem VII. 

This poem, red-hot from the furnace of passion, is the 
poet's answer to a question of Lesbia's. It concludes 
with an allusion to the occult influence of envy similar 
to that in Carm. V. 

Martial has imitated this poem in some very pretty 
lines, (Epigr. vi. 34) :— 

Diadumene ! come, kiss, and kiss me more and more ; 
How oft ? As well say count the waves that ocean fill, 

The myriad shells that scatter'd lie on the Aegean shore, 
And bees that wander o'er Hymettus' flowery hill, 

Or in the crowded theatre the cheers or hands that wave 
When all the people see a-sudden Caesar come; 

1 will not have what sweet Catullus ask'd and I^esbia gave : 
Few are the joys he craves who number can the sum. 

Carm. VII. v. 4. • 

Laserpiciferis ■ Cyrenis. 

Cyrene ( Ghrennah), the chief city of Cyrenaica, founded by 
Battus, (B.C. 631.) 

V. 5. Oraculum Jovis inter aestuosi. 

The famous oracle of Jupiter (Ammon) here referred to was 
situated in the oasis of Ammonium (Siwah), in the Libyan 
desert. 

Cf. with verses 3-8 of this poem, Catull. xlviii., and Ovid. 
Epist. ex Ponto, ii. 7, 23-30. 

Crede mihi, si sum veri tibi cognitus oris, 
Ne numeros nostris casibus esse putes, 

Cinyphiae segetis citius numerabis aristas, 
Altaque quam multis floreat Hybla thy mis : 

Et quot aves motis nitantur in aere pennis, 
Quotque natent pisces aequore, certus eris, 



1 86 EXCURSUS AND 

Quam tibi nostrorum statuatur summa laborum, 
Quos ego sum terra, quos ego passus aqua. 

If thou in me a truthful man hast known, 

Think not my woes can be by numbers shown, 

Thou 'It sooner sum Cinyphia's ears of corn, 

The flowers of thyme that Hybla's hills adorn, 

The feather'd tribes that boundless ether skim, 

The myriad fishes that in ocean swim, — 

Than all my woes by thee shall number' d be, 

The woes I 've borne by land — the woes I Ve borne by sea. 



Poem VIII. 

Catullus awakens from his dream of bliss. Lesbia is 
false. She has been fooling him. He cannot endure it. 
He consoles himself with the thought that she once loved 
him ; that he once loved her ; but it is all over now — 

Fulsere quondam candidi tibi soles. 

He bids her farewell for ever, and vows henceforward to 
remain insensible to the witchery of her charms. He 
pictures the wretchedness of her future life, the loneliness 
of her lot ; the hues of beauty fading from her cheek ; 
love grown cold, and all its joys for ever blighted ; and 
declares once more his firm and unshaken resolve. Yet, 
all her faithlessness notwithstanding, he cannot think of 
Lesbia as the mistress of another. How different the 
feelings of Catullus in this poem from those of his great 
successor in the realm of lyric poetry, when he bids fare- 
well to the beautiful Neaera. (Epod. xv.) : — 

'Twas night ; and in the starry sky 
The moon was shining clear, 



ILL USTRA TIVE NO TES. 1 87 

When thou to mock the gods on high 
Didst whisper in mine ear, 
The while my neck encircling with those soft white arms of thine, 
More close than ivy sprays around the stately ilex twine. 

"So long as flocks the wolf shall flee, 
And as Orion's star, 
Wild -harassing the wintry sea, 
Affrights the mariner, 
Yea, while the gentle breeze fans young Apollo's streaming hair, 
So long our love shall constant be, so long mine own ! I swear." 

Alas ! thou 'It mourn my slighted truth, 

For know, while honour 's mine, 
I ne'er will suffer rival youth 
To press his heart to thine. 
Another shall be mine ; farewell ! my sure resolve once ta'en, 
Thy hated beauty ne'er will shake my fixedness again. 

Go, happier swain, thy pathway hold, 

Exulting o'er my woe, 
Though thine be flocks and lands untold — 
For thee Pactolus flow : 
Though learned as the Samian thou — to thee fair Nireus vile, 
With tears thou 'It curse the fickle jade, while I in turn shall smile. 

Carm. VIII. 

Compare with this and the later poems to Lesbia. Ovid. 
Amor. iii. 11. 

Much, long I bore : my patience is outworn ; 

Leave my worn heart, base love, thy reign is o'er; 
I 'm free, my fetters I 've asunder torn, 

I blush I 've borne what I unblushing bore. 

I 've conquer' d, and I trample conquer'd love; 

Too long I wore a too complacent brow. 
Endure; be steel; thy woe thy weal will prove, 

Oft bitter draughts have soothed the wretch ere now. 

So oft repulsed thy portal, did I place 

My freeborn body on the cold damp stone? 



1 88 EXCURSUS AND 

Did I, while one received thy fond embrace, 
Guard like a slave thy closed door alone ? 

I 've seen thy lover, weak in every limb, 
Like jaded veteran from thy threshold go ; 

This pain was light ; but to be seen of him ! 
May such disgrace, ye gods ! befall my foe. 

When, patiently, have I not to thee clung ? 

Thou hadst a guardian, lover, friend, in me, 
Thou wast beloved because thy charms I 'd sung, 

My love made many a lover dote on thee. 

Why should I tell thy vain tongue's impious lies ? 

Thy broken oaths attested by the gods ? 
Or at the board thy bland, deceitful guise, 

Thy preconcerted signs and silent nods ? 

They said, " She's sick," to thee I frantic sped, 
There was no sickness when my rival came ; 

From these and other wrongs my heart hath bled, 
Go find another who will bear the same. 

My vessel now, with votive garlands crown'd, 
Hears, safely moor'd, the dashing billows' roar ; 

Hence with thy fondling words of spell-like sound, 
I am no more the fool I was before. 

Hatred and love my troubled bosom fill, 
But love, methinks, with fiercer fury burns ; 

I '11 willing hate, else love against my will ; 
The steer disdains yet bears the yoke he spurns. 

I flee thy vileness, and thy charms adore, 

Detest thy crimes, before thy beauty kneel ; 
With or without thee life is life no more, 
I seem to know not what I think or feel. 

Would thou hadst virtue more or charms less bright, 
Such beauty ill-beseems a course so base, 



ILL USTRA TIVE NOTES. 1 89 

Hatred thy deeds, but love thy charms excite, 
Ah, me ! thy face thy falseness far outweighs. 

Oh, spare me by the rights of love, and by 
The gods invoked in those false vows of thine, 

And by thy face — a mighty deity — 

And by thy radiant eyes that ravish'd mine. 

Be what thou wilt, mine thou shalt ever be, 
Choose 'tween a love against or with my will, 

My sails are spread, winds, waft us o'er life's sea, 
For, though I would not, I must love thee still. 

V. 3. Fulsere quondam candidi tibi soles. 

Cf. Burns — 

Farewell hours that late did measure 
Sunshine days of joy and pleasure. 

V. 14, &c. 

At tu dolebis, cum rogaberis nulla. 
Scelesta ! vae te ! Quae tibi manet vita ? 

Cf. Tibull. i. 8, 39-46. 

Non lapis hanc gemmaeque juvant, quae frigore sola 

Dormiat et nulli sit cupienda viro. 
Heu sero revocatur amor seroque juventa, 

Cum vetus infecit cana senecta caput. 
Turn studium formae est : coma turn mutatur, ut annos 

Dissimulet viridi cortice tincta nucis : 
Tollere turn cura est albos a stirpe capillos 

Et faciem dempta pelle referre novam. 

Rich stones and gems can ne'er her heart engage, 
Who in the cold, all undesired, sleeps lone ; 

Too late are iove and youth recall'd, when age 
The snows of winter o'er the head hath strown. 

Then comes the rage for beauty, then the care 
With green-nut-husk the changed locks to stain, 



190 EXCURSUS AND 

To wipe out years, to pluck each silver hair, 
To make the wither' d cheek bloom fresh again. 

Id. i. 9, 77 to the end— 

Blanditiasne meas aliis tu vendere es ausus, \ 

Tune aliis demens oscula ferre mea ? 
Tunc flebis cum me vinctum puer alter habebit 
Et geret in regno regna superba tuo. 

At tua turn me poena juvet, Venerique merenti 
Fixa notet casus aurea palma meos. 

" Hanc tibi fallaci resolutus amore Tibullus 
Dedicat et grata sis, dea, mente rogat." 

To other lovers hast thou dared impart 
The joys, the kisses due to me alone, 

Thou'lt weep when one more leal enchains my heart, 
And proudly sways my breast, once all thine own. 

Thy pain will glad my soul — a golden shield 
To Venus, my protectress, shall proclaim : 

" From glad Tibullus, saved from love's fell field, 
Who prays thy favour and reveres thy name." 

V. 1 8. 

Quern basiabis ? quoi labella mordebis ? 

Cf. Hor. Od. i. 13, n-15. 

. . . . sive puer furens 
Impressit memorem dente labris notam. 

Non, si me satis audias, 
Speres perpetuum, dulcia barbare 

Laedentem oscula. 

And Tibull. i. 6, 13, 14. 

Tunc succos herbasque dedi, quis livor abiret, 
Quern facit impresso mutua dente Venus. 

I gave her herbs and juices, to remove 
The leaden traces of the tooth of love. 



ILL USTRA TIVE NO TES. 1 9 1 



Poem IX. 

This exquisite little poem, every line of which is redolent 
of rare and disinterested friendship, is addressed to a 
young man, of whom little is known except the name. 
He had gone to Spain in the suite of Piso, but, owing to 
the greediness and meanness of his superior, the calling 
he had chosen proved anything but a lucrative one. 

Carm. IX. v. 9. 

Jucundum os, oculosque suaviabor. 

Cf. Homer. Odyss. xvi. 15. 

~Kv(Tcre de jullp KecpaXrjv re kclI a/JL(pu (pdea KaXa. 
Compare with this poem, passi??t, Hor. Od. i. 36. 



Poem X. 



CATULLUS has just returned from Bithynia, whither he 
had gone v in the suite of Caius Memmius Gemellus, to 
whose knavery he in great measure attributes his own 
ill-fortune and that of his companions. Memmius, to 
whom Lucretius dedicated his noble poem " De Rerum 
Natura," was as distinguished for culture and scholarly 
attainments as for grasping meanness, profligacy, and 
extravagance. 

Whether the Varus of this poem is Alphenus Varus, 
(Cremonensis), the lawyer, or Quintilius Varus, (Cre- 
monensis), the friend of Horace and Virgil, it is impos- 
sible to say. Most of the commentators think the former 
is the person referred to. 



192 EXCURSUS AND 

Carm. X. v. 20. 

Non possem octo homines parare rectos. 
Cf. Mart. ix. 3-1 1. 

OctO Syris suffulta datur lectica puellae. 



Poem XL 



Catullus, in a somewhat lengthy but magnificent exor- 
dium, pays a high tribute to the tried friendship of Furius 
and Aurelius. 

Firm in his resolve to abandon Lesbia for ever, he 
intrusts the parting message to these friends. In the 

injunction — 

Pauca nuntiate meae puellae 
Non bona dicta, 

we can distinguish traces of a lingering fondness. Catullus 
cannot bear the thought that she should cherish affection 
for another, and prays that, although she may be sur- 
rounded by hundreds of admirers, her heart may be, for 
ever, dead to love. 

The beautiful image of the share-crushed flower, in the 
last stanza, has been repeatedly imitated. 

Carm. XI. v. 1, seqq. 

Furi et Aureli comites Catulli. 
Cf. Hor. Od. ii. 6, 1-4. 

Septimi, Gades aditure mecum, et 
Cantabrum indoctum juga ferre nostra, et 
Barbaras Syrtes, ubi Maura semper 
Aeslnat unda. 

V. 3. Litus ut longe, &c. 

ut=ubi. 



ILL USTRA TIVE NO TES. 1 93 

V. 21. .... velut prati 

Ultimi flos, praetereunte postquam 

Tactus aratro est. 
Cf. Virg. ^En. ix. 435 — 

Purpureus veluti cum flos, succisus aratro, 
Languescit moriens. 

As when the purple flower, cut by the share, 
Droops dying. 
And Burns, a Toa Mountain Daisy," passim. 



Poem XII. 



Marrucinus Asinius, to whom this by no means com- 
plimentary poem is addressed, was the son of Cneius 
Asinius, and brother of the celebrated Caius Asinius 
Pollio. Whether Marrucinus is a name or an epithet it 
is difficult to say ; but there is little doubt that Asinius 
was indebted for it to the circumstance that the gens 
Asinia originally belonged to Teate, the chief town of 
the Marriicini, a Marsic people inhabiting the district 
lying between the Vestini and Peligni. 

While the poet deprecates the absurd behaviour of 
Marrucinus, he speaks in high terms of the honour- 
able character and cheerful dispositions of Pollio. The 
latter afterwards played a distinguished part in the 
reign of Augustus, whose favour and friendship he 
gained. He was alike famous as soldier, orator, his- 
torian, and dramatic poet. Virgil and Horace enjoyed 
his patronage and intimacy. The former alludes with 
pride to Pollio's appreciation of the productions of his 
muse, and has inscribed to him his fourth Eclogue; 
while the latter, in the first ode of his Second Book, has 
paid a high tribute to his varied abilities. He died at 
his Tusculan villa A.D. 4, in the eightieth year of his age. 

N 



- 



194 EXCURSUS AND 



Carm. XII. verses 12, 13, 16, 17. 

Quod me non movet aestimatione, 
Verum est imiemosynon mei sodalis. 

Haec amem necesse est 

Ut Veranniolum meum et Fabullum. 

Cf. Ovid. Heroid. xvii. 71, 72 — 

.... sic acceptissima semper 
Munera sunt, auctor quae pretiosa facit. 
So ever the receiver most doth prize 
The gift whose value in the giver lies. 

V. 14. Nam sudaria Saetaba, &c., 

Saetabis, Jativa, a town of the Contestani in Hispania 
Tarraconensis, and a Roman municipium, celebrated for its 
linen manufactures, lay on a hill south of the Sucro. 



Poem XIII. 

CATULLUS promises his friend a glorious dinner, if he 
will furnish the materials. In return for these he will 
give him an unguent, and such an unguent ! 

Quod tu cum olfacies, Deos rogabo, 
Totum ut te faciant, Fabulle, nasum. 

Horace invites his friend Virgil — whoever that " juvenum 
nobilium cliens" might be — to a somewhat similar enter- 
tainment, engaging to provide the " cask" if Virgil brings 
the " box of unguents." 

Martial, in an amusing epigram, tells us of an enter- 
tainment given by a worthy in his day, who, like the 



ILLUSTRATIVE ImuaES. igS 

friend of our poet, rejoiced in the name of Fabullus, at 
which there was nothing but unguents. (Epigr. iii. 12.) 

Unguentum, fateor, bonum dedisti 
Convivis here : sed nihil scidisti. 
Res salsa est, bene olere et esurire. 
Qui non coenat et ungitur, Fabulle, 
Hie vere mihi mortuus videtur. 

The guests you had for yesterday invited 
Were with your unguents, I confess, delighted ; 
But you had neither joint nor cold collation, 
7 Tis rather funny, perfumes and starvation ; 
Who nothing eats, but sits a perfumed dummy, 
Appears to me to be a perfect mummy. 

The use of perfumes among the Romans was all but uni- 
versal, and during the Empire the taste for them amounted 
to a frenzy. The Romans' were entirely unacquainted 
with distillation till the time of Nero ; consequently they 
preserved the odours of flowers and herbs in oil. The 
coarser kinds were kept in shells iconchae)^ or bottles of 
a globular form (ampullae) ; the finer sorts in small vases 
made from a kind of gypsum (alabastwn. s. onyx). Owing 
to the narrowness of the neck of the latter, the contents 
could only be got drop by drop, and when the whole was 
wanted at once it was necessary to break the bottle. (Cf. 
N. T., St Mark xiv. 3, and St Matt, xxvi. 7.) 

Martial recommends that wine and perfumes should 
be enjoyed by the possessor, never left to heirs. (Epigr. 
xiii. 126.) 

Unguentum heredi nunquam, nee vina relinquas. 
Ille habeat nummos : haec tibi tota dato. 

Leave not thine heir thy perfumes or thy wine ; 
Leave him thy money : but let these be thine. 



196 EXCURSUS AND 

And again, with reference to the juice of the grape 
(Epigr. vi. 27, 5, 6.) 

Tu tamen annoso nimium ne parce Falerno : 
Et potius plenos aere relinque cados. 

Stint not the produce of the Falern vine : 

Leave your casks fill'd with money, not with wine. 

Carm. XIII. v. i. 

Coenabis bene, mi Fabulle, apud me. 
Cf. Mart. Epigr. xi. 52, 1. 

Coenabis belle, Juli Cerealis, apud me. 

V. 9. Sed contra accipies 7neros amores. 

Cf. Mart. xiv. 206— "Cestos." 

Collo necte, puer, meros am ores, 
Ceston de Veneris sinu calentem. 

This Cestus warm from Venus' breast, O boy ! 
Twine round thy neck, 'tis love without alloy. 

V. 11, 12. Nam Cupidinesque. 

Cf. Propert. hi. 27, 15-18. (ii. 29, 15-18.) 

Quae cum Sidoniae nocturna ligamina mitrae 

Solvent atque oculos moverat ilia graves, 
Adflabunt tibi non Arabum de gramine odores, 

Sed quos ipse suis fecit Amor rnanibus. . \ 

■ When her Sidonian nightcap she unties, 
And opens up her slumber-laden eyes, 
Thou 'It breathe no scents from herbs of Araby, 
But those that Love's own hands express'd for thee. 



ILL USTRA TIVE NO TES. 1 97 



Poem XIV. 

Caius Licinius Macer Calvus, to whom this poem is 
addressed, was an orator and poet of great celebrity. 

Tacitus, Cicero, and Seneca bear testimony to his abi- 
lities as an orator, and Aulus Gellius to his merits as a 
poet. His first great oratorical performance was the im- 
peachment of Vatinius. ( Vide Excursus to Carm. liii.) 

His poetical productions bore a strong resemblance to 
those of Catullus in elegance, simplicity, and licentious- 
ness. 



Poem XVI. 

In this poem, addressed to Aurelius and Furius, the 
tried friends by whom he sent his farewell message to 
Lesbia, Catullus defends himself against the imputation 
of unchastity made by them against him. With regard 
to his verses he claims that licence ever accorded to the 
priest of the Muses. Ovid has done the same, (Trist. ii. 
353,354):— 

Crede mihi, distant mores a carmine nostro : 
Vita verecunda est, Musa jocosa mea. 

Trust me, a twofold line your bard pursues, 
Pure is his life, but gamesome is his muse*. 

And Martial, in a pointed epigram (i. 36) addressed to 
his friend Cornelius, has laid down the. law of the matter 
with sufficient clearness : — 

Cornelius, you complain my lays are loose, 
And unadapted to scholastic use ; 



198 EXCURSUS AND 

Why, just as in the case of man and wife, 
The prick of pleasantry 's their very life. 
What ! would you have me sing a bridal lay, 
And in funereal words the theme essay ? 
At Flora's festival who robes him o'er, 
And looks for white-stoled virtue in a whore ? 
Of sportive songs this ever was the law, 
Unless they 're spiced they are not worth a straw. 
With your morose reflections, then, begone, 
Leave my light themes and sportive jests alone, 
Nor mutilate my books, I beg of you : 
Priapus gelt ! Egad ! 'twould never do. 

In addition to the passages cited above, compare the follow- 
ing :— 

Mart. Epigr. i. 5, 7, 8 — 

Innocuos censura potest permittere lusus : 
Lasciva est nobis pagina, vita proba est. 

My harmless jokes the censor may endure : 
My page is wanton, but my life is pure. 

Ovid. Trist. ii. 363-370. 

Quid, nisi cum multo Venerem confundere vino, 

Praecepit lyrici Tei'a Musa senis ? 
Lesbia quid docuit Sappho nisi amare puellas ? 

Tuta tamen Sappho, tutus et ille fuit. 

Nee tibi, Battiade, nocuit, quod saepe legenti 

Delicias versu fassus es ipse tuas. 
Fabula jucundi nulla est sine amore Menandri, 

Et solet hie pueris virginibusque legi. 

" Blend love and rosy wine," the old Teian long 
Taught in his lyrics as ne'er taught another ; 

" Oh, love the girls," ran Lesbian Sappho's song, 
And no man question'd either one or t'other. 






ILLUSTRATIVE NOTES. 1 99 

Callimachus, it never harm'd thy lay 

To tell the raptures of a heart love-laden ; 

Where is the gay Menander's loveless play? 
And yet he 's read by boy and blushing maiden. 

And again, v. 427-436 — 

Sic sua lascivo cantata est saepe Catullo 

Femina, cui falsum Lesbia nomen erat. 
Nee contentus ea, multos vulgavit amores, 

In quibus ipse suum fassus adulterium est. 
Par fuit exigui similisque licentia Calvi, 

Detexit variis qui sua furta modis. 
'Quid referam Ticidae, quid Memmi carmen, apud quos 

Rebus adest nomen nominibusque pudor 
Cinna quoque his comes est, Cinnaque procacior Anser, 

Et leve Cornifici parque Catonis opus. 

The wanton bard Catullus sang of yore 
. His charmer's praise in many a sportive ditty, 
Where she the feigned name of Lesbia bore ; 
And, not contented with his sweetheart pretty, 

His many loves he published far and near, 
Confess'd his relish for forbidden pleasures ; 

And little Calvus, too, in this his peer, 

Has told us his intrigues in various measures. 

Memmius and Ticida their songs did fill 

With shameless themes and words I ne'er gave way to, 
So Cinna, Anser more lascivious still, 

As well as Cornificius and Cato. 



Poem XVI L 

The subject of this poem is January and May — a lethar- 
gic old fool wedded to a blooming young girl. Muretus 
thinks Verona is the town referred to ; while Scaliger and 
Vossius contend for Novo Como. 



200 EXCURSUS AND 

Carm. XVII. v. 15. 

Et puella tenellulo delicatior haedo. 

Cf. Ovid. Met. xiii. 791 — . . . tenero lascivior haedo. 
And Theoc. Idyll, xi. 20, 21 — . . . airdXcjTipa apvbs 

Mocrxw yavporepa. 



Poems XVI 1 1., XIX., XX. 

The first of these poems is undoubtedly a fragment of a 
piece by Catullus. The authenticity of the other two is 
more than doubtful ; but, as they appear in many editions 
of Catullus, it has been deemed advisable to give them in 
this translation. 

Carm. XVIII. v. 2. 

Qua domus tua Lampsaci est. 

Cf. Priapeia, 76, 15— 

Mortales tibi Lampsacum dicarunt. 

Lampsacus was an important city of Mysia on the coast of the 
Hellespont. It was the chief seat of the worship of Priapus. 

Carm. XIX. v. 6. 

(1.) Pauperis tuguri pater, filiusque coloni. 

(2.) tenellus. 

(3.) Pauperis tuguri pater ipse filiolusque. 

These are the conjectural emendations of Scaliger, Vossius, and 
Handius respectively. I have followed the last. 



ILL US TEA TIVE NO TES. 20 1 

Cf. Virg. Eclog. i. 69. 

Pauperis et tugun congestum cespite culmen. 

V. 14. Uva umbra. 

Cf. Virg. Eclog. vii. 58— 

Liber pampineas invidit collibus umbras. 

V. is, 16. 

Sanguine hanc etiam mihi (sed tacebitis) aram 
Barbatus linit hirculus. 

Cf. Theoc. Epigr. i. 5 — 

JSu/jlop 5' OLLfxa^el Kepabs Tpdyos ovtos 6 fiaXos. 

The horn'd white he-goat shall thine altar stain. 

Carm. XX. v. 6-9. Mihi frigore. 

Cf. Priapeia, lxxxiv. 

Vere rosa, autumno pomis, aestate frequentor 

Spicis : una mihi est horrida pestis hiems. 
Nam frigus metuo : et vereor, ne ligneus ignem 

Hac Deus ignaris praebeat agricolis. 

Spring brings me roses, summer ears of corn, 
Autumn rich fruits : in winter I 'm forlorn. 
I fear not cold, but dread lest boors conspire 
To chop me into logs to feed the fire. 

V. 13. 

Cf. Virg. Eclog. i. 36— 

Non unquam gravis aere domum mihi dextra redibat. 
And Moretum, v. 81 — 

Inde domum cervice levis gravis aere redibat. 



202 EXCURSUS AND 



Poem XXII. 

In these lines to Varus, Catullus ridicules the absurd 
conduct and inordinate vanity of Suffenus. This con- 
ceited scribbler, mentioned also in Carm. xiv. v. 19, is 
otherwise unknown. 

Carm. XXII. v. 15-17. neque miratur. 

Cf. Hor. Epist. ii. 2, 107, 108. 

Gaudent scribentes «t se venerantur, et ultro, 
Si taceas, laudant quicquid scripsere, beati. 

They write, and with approving smile 
They idolise themselves the while, 
And praise — if you should silent sit — 
Their own blest lot and matchless wit. 

V. 20. Suus quoique attributus est error. 
Cf. Propert ill 15, 13-20. (ii. 22, 13-20.) — 

Quaeris, Demophoon, cur sim tarn mollis in omnes? 

Quod quaeris Quare non habet ullus amor. 
Cur aliquis sacris laniat sua brachia cultris 

Et Phrygis insanos caeditur adnumeros? 
Unicuique dedit vitiu?n natura creato: 

Mi fortuna aliquid semper amare dedit : 
Me licet et Thamyrae cantoris fata sequantur, 

Nunquam ad formosas, invide, caecus ero. 

Why do I melt at every Beauty's charms ? 

Why ask me? such a " why" love never knew. 
Why with the knife does votary gash his arms, 

And to the frantic notes his members hew? 

Some failing nature did to each assign — 
My fate has ever been to love the fair ; 

And, Envy ! though rapt Thamyras' doom be mine, 
I never will be blind if Beauty 's there. 



ILL US TEA TIVE NO TES. 203 

V. 21. 

Sed non videmus manticae quod in tergo est. 

Cf. Phaedr. Fab. iv. 10. (Nisard's Collection) — 
Peras imposuit Jupiter nobis duas : 
Propriis repletam vitiis post tergum dedit, 
Alienis ante pectus suspendit gravem. 
Hac re videre nostra mala non possumus ; 
Alii simul delinquunt, censores sumus. 

Two wallets Jove to each assign'd, 
Both fill'd with faults : the one behind 
Contains our own : the one before 
With others' sins is brimming o'er ; 
Hence 'tis we cannot see our own, 
Our neighbours' in a trice are shown. 

Cf. also Burns — 

O wad some power the giftie gie us 
To see ours els as others see us. 



Poem XXIII. 

If this Furius is the person mentioned in poems xi. and 
xvi. he must have been in extreme poverty. Catullus 
could hardly have been expected to lend money to a 
man whose house could not boast of a fire, a spider, or 
a bug! 

Cf. with this poem, passim, Mart. Epigr. xi. 32. 



204 EXCURSUS AND 



Poem XXIV. 

DOERING and others think that the "penniless beau" is 
Furius, to whom the preceding poem is addressed. Per- 
haps it is Aurelius. (Cf. Carm. xv. and xxi.) 

Carm. XXIV. v. 7. 

Qui ? non est homo bellus ? inquies. est. 

A beau (bellus homo) is thus defined by Martial, (Epigr. iii. 63.) 

Cotile, bellus homo es : dicunt hoc, Cotile, multi. 

Audio : sed quid sit, die mihi, bellus homo ? 
Bellus homo est, flexos qui digerit ordine crines : 

Balsama qui semper, cinnama semper olet : 
Cantica qui Nili, qui Gaditana susurrat : 

Qui movet in varios brachia volsa modos : 
Inter femineas tota qui luce cathedras 

Desidet, atque aliqua semper in aure sonat : 
Qui legit hinc illinc missas, scribitque tabellas : 

Pallia vicini qui refugit cubiti : 
Qui scit quam quis amet, qui per convivia currit : 

Hirpini veteres qui bene novit avos. 
Quid narras? hoc est, hoc est homo, Cotile, bellus? 

Res praetricosa est, Cotile, bellus homo. 

Cotilus, you are a beau; yes, Cotilus, many declare it. 

Such is the story I hear : tell me, then, what is a beau ? 
Why, sir, a beau is a man who arranges his tresses in order : 

Smelling for ever of balm, smelling of cinnamon spice : 
Singing the songs of the Nile or a-humming the ditties of Cadiz : 

Never at rest with his arms, moving them this way or that : 
Lounging on sofas from morning to night with a bevy of ladies : 

Aye in the ears of some girl whispering some silly tale : 



ILL USTRA TIVE NO TES. 205 

Reading a letter from Rhode or Chloe, or writing to Phyllis : 

Shunning the sleeve of his friend lest he should ruffle his dress : 
Everyone's sweetheart he'll tell you, he swaggers the lion at 
parties : 
Bets on the favourite horse, tells you his sire and his dam. 
Cotilus, what are you telling me? — this thing! is this thing a 
beau? 
Cotilus, then I must say he 's a contemptible thing. 



Poem XXV. 
Carm. XXV. v. 1, 2. 



mollior cuniculi capillo 



Vel anseris medullula. 

Cf. Priapeia, lxiv. I. 

Quidam, mollior anseris medulla. 
V. 7. Thynos. 

Vide infra, Carm. xxxi. 



Poem XXVI. 

The point of this poem lies in the first line, of whicfi 
there is a double reading — some editors giving " nostra," 
others " vostra." We have followed the former, which 
has been adopted by Doering, Haupt, Rossbach, Ellis, 
&c. 



2C6 



EXCURSUS AND 



Poem XXVII. 

This little poem has the genuine Anacreontic ring. 
Catullus means a drinking-bout in earnest, and water 
is out of the question. It was customary, however, with 
the ancients to drink their wine diluted. Here is one 
recipe ; nor are the perfumes and roses forgotten. (Mart. 
Epigr. v. 64.) 

Two-sixths of old Falern, Callistus, pour for me, 
Let summer snows be mix'd, young Alcimus, by thee, . 
Around my shining locks diffuse the unguents free, 
And round my temples string sweet roses from the tree. 
Yon splendid tombs say : Grasp the moments ere they fly, 
For they declare that even gods themselves can die. 

The same poet, in a charming little piece, recommends 
his friend Liber, unguented and rose-crowned, to in- 
dulge his genius with a beaker of old Falernian. (Epigr. 
viii. yy.) 

Liber, to all thy friends in close affection bound, 

O worthy thou to live with rose eternal crown' d : 

If thou art wise, thy locks with Syrian nard will shine, 

And ever round thy brow the rosy garlands twine ; 

The old Falernian blacken aye thy crystal bowl, 

And o'er thy downy bed, Love, hovering, cheer thy soul . . 

Who middle age hath seen, directing -thus his ways, 

Hath far outlived, I ween, the measure of his days. 

As we will not have another opportunity, for this is the 
only poem by Catullus in praise of wine, we may be par- 
doned for giving here the following tit-bit of Anacreon's 
philosophy, (xix.) : — 

Black earth drinks the rain ; the trees 

Drain the earth again; 
Ocean quaffs the mountain breeze ; 

Phoebus swills the main : 



ILL US TEA TIVE NOTES. 207 

Dian drinks the sun's bright beam ; 

Then why blame ye me, 
Friends, if I the red wine's stream 

Quaff right joyously ? 

Carm. XXVII. v. 1, 2. 

Minister vetuli, puer, Falerni, 
Inger mi calices amariores. 

Cf. Burns — Go fetch to me a pint o' wine, 

An' fill it in a silver tassie. 

And Tennyson,, in "Will Waterproof's Lyrical Monologue" — 
O plump head-waiter at the Cock, 

To which I most resort, 
How goes the time? 'Tis five o'clock. 

Go fetch a pint of port : 
But let it not be such as that 

You set before chance-comers, 
But such whose father-grape grew fat 

On Lusitanian summers. 

V. 5 j 6. lymphae 

Vini pernicies. 

Propertius (hi. 31, 25-28) (ii. 33, 25-28) seems to consider 
" wine" the "bane of water:" — 

Lenta bibis : mediae nequeunt te frangere noctes. 

An nondum est talos mittere lassa manus ? 
Ah pereat, quicumque meracas repperit uvas 

Corrupitque bonas nectare primus aquas ! 

Late, late thou drink'st ; not midnight bids thee rise ; 

And canst thou, tireless, still the dice endure ? 
Curst be the man who grapeward cast his eyes, 

And first with nectar spoil'd the water pure ! 



208 EXCURSUS AND 



Poem XXVIII. 

In this piece of trenchant invective Catullus attacks 
Piso and his own praetor, Memmius, with all the bitter- 
ness of personal hate. Verannius and Fabullus, in their 
expedition, had been no more successful than our poet in 
his. He therefore dissuades them from a second trial of 
the service with the contemptuous sneer, " Pete nobiles 
amicos." In this poem we have a sample of the deter- 
mined spirit in which Catullus was ever ready to assail 
autocracy. It was all one to him whether the despot was 
a Memmius or a Piso, a Mamurra or a Caesar. 



Poem XXIX. 

/ MAMURRA and Caesar are now the victims of the poet's 
lash. The former is doubtless the ostensible subject 
of attack, but he affords Catullus an excellent oppor- 
tunity for attacking the " foremost man in all the world/' 
Catullus cannot brook the idea that a charlatan and 
libertine like Mamurra should drain and harass {he 
countries of Gaul and Britain, nay, more, should be 
permitted to bring shame and dishonour to the very 
hearths and homes of the Roman people. He openly 
charges Mamurra with gross debauchery and reckless 
tyranny, and fearlessly taxes Caesar himself with in- 
famous enormities. 

It has been supposed, from a passage in Suetonius, 
that this poem, or the one numbered lvii., was read to 
Caesar when he visited Cicero at his Tusculan villa. 
Either of these poems, we should think, would have brought 
down on the head of the offender the signal vengeance of 



ILL US TEA TIVE NO TES. 209 

the Dictator. So far from that being the case, Suetonius 
informs us (Caes. cap. lxxxiii.) that Caesar not only for- 
gave him on his apologising for his rashness, but con- 
tinued to live on terms of intimacy with his father. If 
this statement is correct, Caesar must not only have stood 
in great awe of the bitter lampoons of Catullus, but must 
have considered leniency and forbearance as the best 
means of securing immunity from the virulence of his 
pen. ' 

Carm. XXIX. v. 9. 

Ut albums columbus aut Adoneus. 

This is the common reading, but it is manifestly corrupt, there 
being no such word as Adoneus. 

The reading of Muretus and Heinsius is better, though still 
objectionable — 

Ut albulus columbulus Dioneus. 
Schwabius reads — 

Ut albulus columbus haut idoneus, 
which, though quite satisfactory in respect of quantity, appears 
forced and frigid. 
Why not 

Ut albulus columbus aut Ionicus, 
(or Ionius) ? 

Cf. Plaut. Stich. 750— 

Qui Ionicus aut cinaedicus, qui hoc tale facere possiet ? 
And Hor. Od. hi. 6, 21, 22 — * 

Motus doceri gaudet Ionicos 
Matura virgo. 
On the amorous nature of the pigeon, vide Catull. Ixviii. 125 - 
128; and parallels to the same passage, infra. 



2 1 o EX CURS US A ND 



Poem XXX. 

This poem is full of grief and tender pathos. In what 
circumstances Alphenus (Varus ?) had proved false to the 
poet and broken the sacred ties of friendship we have\ 
no means of ascertaining. It is quite evident, however, 
that he had been on terms of the closest intimacy and 
friendship with Catullus, else he would not have thus de- 
plored his perfidy. This piece is very different in tone 
from those in which he denounces the disgraceful conduct 
of Furius, Aurelius, and others who had enjoyed his 
friendship. 

Carm. XXX. v. 4. Nee placent. 

Cf. Horn. Odyss. xiv. &3 — 

Ov jul€p (rxeVXta epya Oeol /xd/capes (pikeovviv* 



Poem XXXI. 

This lovely little poem appears to have been written by 
Catullus immediately after his return from Bithynia. 
Emancipated from the thrall of Memmius, and travel- 
sore from a fruitless expedition to a barbaric land, he is 
enraptured at the sight of his beloved Sirmio, and gives 
vent to his joyous feelings with all the fervour of a boy. 

Sirmio {Sirmione) is connected with the mainland by 
a long and narrow bank, and has almost the appearance 
of an island. It is little more than two miles in circum- 
ference, and lies in the bosom of Lake Benacus (Lago di 



ILL USTRA TIVE NO TES. 2 1 1 

Garda), whose sea-green waters, though smiling so sweetly 
for Catullus, did sometimes wear a frown : (Virg. Georg. 
ii. 160) — 

Fluctibus et fremitu adsurgens, Benace, marino. 

The peninsula is fringed with rows of cypress trees ; and 
somewhere along its shore was the quiet cove in which 
Catullus stowed the yacht that brought him safely home 
from his wanderings. {Vide Carm. iv.) 

The site of what must have been a splendid villa — 70c 
feet long by 300 broad — which many conceive to have 
been the patrimonial mansion of the poet, may still be 
seen. If, as Vulpius thinks from the word "herus" in 
the poem, the whole peninsula belonged to him, he must 
have been in princely circumstances, and all his outcries 
against poverty must be treated as a joke. 

Napoleon, in 1797, on his way to sign the treaty of 
Cariipo Formio, turned aside to visit the site of the poets 
residence. Two years afterwards the French general-in- 
chief La Combe St Michel visited it, got it surveyed, and 
caused a ground-plan to be taken.* The general gave a 
splendid fete in honour of the ancient poet-lord of Sirmio, 
whose praises were sung on the occasion by the Italian 
bard Anelli. 

The Lacus Benacus is in extent about forty miles by 
ten. Why it is called the Lydian Lake by Catullus is 
not quite apparent. Some commentators explain it thus: 
It lay in the Veronese territory which belonged to the 
Rhaeti, the Rhaeti sprang from the Tuscans, the Tuscans 
from the Lydians. Rossbach repudiates this view, and 
considers the line corrupt. 



* More recent investigations tend to show that this villa does not belong 
to the period of Catullus, but rather to that of the Emperor Constantino 
Vide Schwabii Quaest. Catull. p. 51. 



2 1 2 EXCURSUS AND 



Carm. XXXI. v. 4. 

Quam te libenter quamque laetus inviso. 
Cf. Anal. Vet. Poet. Gr. Brunkii. T. iii. Carm. xviii. p. 146 — 
Xa'ip 'Iddicr], fxer ded\a } fxer akyea Titcpa OaXdaarjs 
' Affwaaicos rebp oddas iKdvofxat. 

Hail Ithaca ! from grievous woe and toil 
Endured by sea, I gladly hail thy soil. 

V. 5. Thyniam atque Bithynos. 

Bithynia was possessed at an early period by two Thracian 
tribes, called Thyni and Bithyni. The former dwelt on the 
coast, the latter in the interior. 

V. 9. fessi venimus larem ad nostrum, 

Desideratoque acquiescimus lecto. 
Cf. Tibull. i. 1, 43, 44— 

satis est, requiescere lecto 

Sei licet et solito membra levare toro. 

Enough : reclining on my couch to rest 

And stretch my limbs upon the accustomed bed. 



Poem XXXI I. 
Cf. with this piece, passim, Ovid. Amor. I. El. v. 

V. 7, 8. — paresque nobis 

novem &c. 
Cf. Ovid. Amor. iii. 7, 25, 26 — 

Exigere a nobis angusta nocte Corinnam, 
Me memini numeros sustinuisse novem. 
V. 11. Pertundo &c. 

Cf. Mart. Epigr. xi. 16, 5 — 

O quoties rigida pulsabis pallia vena ! 



ILL USTRA LIVE NO TES. 2 1 3 



Poem XXXIV. 

This poem, which Scaliger tried to identify with the 
hymn sung at the Secular Festival, A.U.C. 737, is neither 
more nor less than a hymn in praise of Diana. Catullus 
had died long before that time, and it is hardly likely 
that he wrote the poem for posterity. Besides, the secu- 
lar hymn in honour of Apollo and Diana was sung in 
alternate stanzas or parts by a chorus of youths and 
maidens ; whereas here both sing the same words. More- 
over, there is no allusion to Apollo in the poem. It is 
merely, as we have said, a hymn to Diana, praying for 
the prosperity of the Roman people. In the fifth stanza 
allusion is made to the moon borrowing her light from 
the sun — a fact well known to the ancients, as witness 
Lucian " De Astrologia," and Pliny, ii. 9. 

Cf. Hor. Od. i. 21, and iii. 22, in both of which he has bor- 
rowed from this poem of Catullus. 



Poem XXXV. 

This little poem affords us a pleasing example of the 
amenity in which Catullus lived with his worthy brethren 
of the lyre. Caecilius, as appears from this piece, had 
written a poem on Cybele, from which circumstance 
some have gone so far as to assign to him the authorship 
of " Atys," On what grounds this conclusion is reached 
we are at a loss to discover, as Atys, not Cybele, is the 
subject of the poem by Catullus. The song of Caecilius 
that so enchanted the young lady here referred to has 



2 1 4, EXCURSUS AND 

perished ; and so likewise would the name of the author 
but for this friendly epistle. Caecilius resided at New 
ComQ, a town on the Lacus Larius seu Comacenus (Lago 
di Como). 

The extreme length of the Lacus Larius is about fifty 
miles ; its extreme breadth not more than eight. 



Poem XXXVI. 

The Volusius* of this poem and the 95th is probably 
Tanusius Geminus, a silly and voluminous annalist 
mentioned by Seneca in one of his Epistles. Vide 
Schwabii Quaest. Catull. p. 279, seqq. 

Carm. XXXVI. v. 6-8. 

Electissima lignis. 

Cf. Tibull. i. 9, 47-50— 

Quin etiam attonita laudes tibi mente canebam, 

Et me nunc nostri Pieridumque pudet. 
Ilia velim rapida Vulcanus carmina flamma 

Torreat et liquida deleat amnis aqua. 

Struck with thy charms my muse enshrined thy name : 

I 'm now ashamed I ever sang thy praise. 
May Vulcan burn with swift-devouring flame 

And rushing streams obliterate my lays. 

V. 12-14. Quae Golgos. 

Cf. Virg. Aen. x. 51 — 

Est Amathus, est celsa mihi Paphos, atque Cythera, 
Idaliaeque domus. 



ILL USTRA TIVE NO TES. 2 1 5 



Poem XXXVII. 

The poet vents his indignation against a number of dis- 
solute youths who ha'd seduced the object of his affec- 
tions. Chief among these was Egnatius, a long-haired, 
black-bearded fop, {vide Carm. xxxix.) Their place of 
meeting was a low tavern a few doors from the temple of 
Castor and Pollux. 

These gods, here called fratres pileati from the cir- 
cumstance of their wearing conical caps, were worshipped 
as the " Penates populi Romani." Their temple stood on/ 
the south side of the Forum, beside a fountain called the 
Lacus Juturnae, at which they watered their steeds after 
the battle of Lake Regillus, (B.C. 496). It was dedicated 
B.C. 484, on the ides of Quintilis, the anniversary of the 
battle. 



Poem XXXVII I . 

Catullus, prostrated by some great grief, upbraids 
Cornificius for forsaking him in the hour of his distress. 
This friend is considered by some to be the poet men- 
tioned by Ovid in the line, (Trist. ii. 436) — 

Et leve Cornifici parque Catonis opus. 

Excursus I. 
Carm. XXXVIII. verse 8. 

SlMONIDES. 

Simonides, the most celebrated elegiac poet of Greece, was a 
native of Ceos, an island in the Aegean. He was born about 



2 1 6 EXCURSUS AND 

the year 556 B.C., and, after an honoured life spent in his native 
island, and afterwards successively at Athens, Sparta, and Syra- 
cuse, died at the advanced age of ninety. The attentions paid 
to him by Hipparchus at Athens, Pausanias at Lacedemon, and 
Hiero at Syracuse, attest the high estimation in which he was 
held by the magnates of his time. The people of Syracuse 
showed him a degree of honour rarely accorded to poets in 
their lifetime, and after his death erected a splendid monument 
to his memory. 

His compositions, which excelled in sweetness (whence his 
surname Melicertes), combined, with the most tender pathos, 
the rarest poetic conception and harmony of expression. 
Though he was inferior in originality and passionate intensity 
to some of his predecessors and contemporaries, his lays were 
esteemed by Hiero more than the matchless odes of Pindar or 
the dignified strains of Bacchylides. 

His works, which included dramatic, elegiac, epigrammatic, 
and lyrical pieces — now for the most part lost — were written in 
the Doric dialect. 

Simonides was the inventor of the new elegy (g\eyos), the 
" querimoitia" of Horace, as distinguished from the old martial 
poem (tXeyelov), also written in distichs of alternate hexameters 
and pentameters, whose origin is attributed to Callinus (B.C. 
776). ' 



Poem XXXIX. 

Catullus ridicules the silly and offensive behaviour of 
Egnatius, who, from Carm. xxxvii. ante, would seem to 
have been a successful rival in some love affair. Egna- 
tius was a native of Celtiberia, a district in the high table- 
land in the centre of Spain. Its inhabitants, as the name 
implies, were a mixed people of Celts and Spaniards 
(Celtae et Iberi). They had recourse to a most singular 



ILL USTRA TIVE NO TES. 2 1 7 

cosmetic for the purpose of beautifying their skin and 
imparting a snowy whiteness to their teeth. In the lines 

Celtiberia in terra, 
Quod quisque minxit, hoc solet sibi mane 
Dentem atque russam defricare gingivam, 

Catullus is guilty of no exaggeration, for Diodorus Sicu- 
lus (Book V.), when speaking of the Celtiberians, bears 
testimony to the custom — 

to ccD/xa Xovovai ovpaj /cat rovs odovras. 

Carm. XXXIX. v. 16. 

Nam risu inepto res ineptior nulla est. 
Cf. Poet. Gr. Gnom. v. 83, 84, p. 224. Edit. Brunck. 
IYXws aKatpos ev fiporoh detvbu kclkov. 
Teka d' 6 fJL&pos, k&v tl \xr\ yekolov fj. 



Poem XL. 



Though Catullus has left no laboured peroration to his 
works like Horace and Ovid, he seems from this, and 
several other poems, to have been equally certain of the 
immortality of his productions. He cannot understand 
why Ravidus, Aurelius, Gellius, &c, should be foolish 
enough to pursue a course which will be certain to secure 
for them an eternity of infamy. 



Poem XLI. 

Catullus in this poem and the 43d lampoons the mis- 
tress of Mamurra. From the portrait which he has 



2 1 8 EXCURSUS A ND 

drawn of her she certainly must have been a very hag ; 
yet it is more than likely that it was in great measure 
owing to the utter detestation in which he held Mamurra 
himself that these poems were written. 

Mamurra was a Roman knight, born at Formiae, 
who followed the fortunes of Caesar in Gaul as com- 
mander of engineers (ftraefectus fabruni)^ in which capa- 
city he managed, by dint of unscrupulous conduct and 
inveterate tyranny, to amass a princely fortune, which he 
as recklessly squandered. Hence the epithet " decoctor" 
applied to him in the poem. 

He built a palatial residence on the Coelian Hill, and 
was the first man in Rome, according to Pliny, who in- 
crusted his walls with marble, and ornamented the struc- 
ture with solid pillars of the same. 



Poem XLII. 

Hendecasyllabic verse, with Catullus, was alike suited 
to tender playfulness, voluptuous passion, and bitter 
invective. 

It was the vehicle of his feelings in the charming 
poems on the sparrow, in the burning kissing-songs to 
Lesbia, and in many occasional pieces, whether written 
in frolic, indignation, or hate. 

Of 116 poems which remain to us of his writings, no 
fewer than thirty-nine are in this metre. It is sometimes 
called " Phalaecian ," from Phalaecus, its inventor. 

Carm. XLII. v. 8. Turpe incedere. 

The ancients set a high value on an easy, graceful step. Vide 
Ovid. A. A. iii. 297-300— 



ILL USTRA TIVE NOTES. 2 1 9 

Omnibus his, quoniam prosunt, impendite curam. 

Discite femineo corpora ferre gradu. 
Est et in incessu pars non contempta decoris : 

Allicit ignotos ille fugatque viros. 

For what they 're worth, these precepts duly prize : 
A graceful walk and carriage still maintain ; 

In woman's step no mean attraction lies, 
And it may banish or allure a swain. 



Poem XLIII. 

Cf. this poem passim with xli. 

V. 1. Salve, net: minimo puella naso, 

Nee bello pede, &c. 

Contrast with this description the lines of Propertius (ii. 2, 5-8.) 

Fulva coma est longaeque manus, et maxima toto 
Corpore, et incedit vel Jove digna soror, 

Aut cum Dulichias Pallas spatiatur ao^ aras, 
Gorgonis anguiferae pectus operta comis. 

Flaxen her hair, hands slender, form divine ; 

No queenlier aspect Juno's self could wear, 
Or Pallas walking by Dulichian shrine, 

With breast conceal'd by Gorgon's snaky hair. 



Poem XLIV. 

This villa seems to have been situated on the very 
boundary line of Sabinum and Latium. Hence it could 
be said with almost equal propriety to lie in either one 
or other of these districts. It must have been in the 



220 EXCURSUS AND 

immediate vicinity of Tibur, and, doubtless, from the 
exceeding amenity of the latter place, Catullus was 
anxious that his villa should be associated with it, at 
least in name. 

Horace, too, though possessing a farm in Sabinum, 
equal to all his wants and desires, was nevertheless con- 
strained to breathe a wish that Tibur might one day 
become the home of his old age, (Od. II. 6, 5-8) — < 

Tibur, Argeo positum colon o, 
Sit meae sedes utinam senectae ; 
Sit modus lasso maris et viarum 
Militiaeque. 

Its great natural beauty ; the wild, rushing Anio on 
which it stood ; the vine and olive groves around it ; the 
ancient temples in its vicinity ; and the society of the 
choicest spirits of the age, gave it a charm in his eyes 
beyond all other places, (Od. II. 6, 14, 15) — 

Ille terrarum mini praeter omnes 
Angulus ridet. 

It was here that, with the industry of a bee, he fashioned 
many of those wonderful poems which have been the 
delight and admiration of every succeeding age. 

(Od. IV. 2, 27-32.) ego, apis Matinae 

More modoque, 
Grata carpentis thyma per laborem 
Plurimum, circa nemus uvidique 
Tiburis ripas, operosa parvus 
Carmina fingo. 



Poem XLV. 

This is one of the most charming songs of antiquity. 
It is such a one as Catullus might have written and 



ILL USTRA TIVE NO TES. 22 1 

sung to Lesbia ere a doubt had arisen in his heart " to 
dim the purple light of love." 

Carm. XLV. v. 8. 

Hoc ut dixit, Amor, sinistram ut ante, 
Dextram sternuit approbationem. 

This is the common reading, but surely sinistra approbatio 
sounds very like nonsense. 

The reading given by Rossbach is, besides being free from 
objection, far more intelligible — 

Hoc ut dixit, Amor sinistra, ut ante, 
Dextram sternuit approbationem, 

that is, " Amor ut ante fecerat, a sinistra ad dextram sternuit, 
quae fuit dextra approbatio vel omen secundum." 

Cf. with this couplet Propert. ii. 3, 23-26 — 

Num tibi nascenti primis, mea vita, diebus 
Candidus argutum sternuit omen Amor? 

Haec tibi contulerunt caelestia munera divi, 
Haec tibi ne matrem forte dedisse putes. 

My life ! O tell me, at thy natal hour 

Did radiant Love a clear, bright omen sneeze? 

Such charms as thine were Heaven's all priceless dower 
Think not thy mother gave thee gifts like these. 

Theoc. Idyll, vii. 95 — 

2^ux^£ p<zv "Epures eireirTapov. 

And Horn. Odyss. xvii. 545 — 

OvX opdacr 6 p.01 vlbs kireirrape iraacv ewecrcriv. 

V. 11-16. Sic medullis. 

Nott, Lamb, and Martin seem to have entirely misunderstood 
the meaning of this passage. So far as we can see, there is no 
comparison instituted between the love of Septimius and that of 
Acme. The meaning is : Let me love thee with a devption in- 



222 EXCURSUS AND 

creasing with the ever-increasing ardour of my affection ; nothing 
more. 

V. 20. Mutuis animis amant amantur. 

Cf. Chaucer, in the "Knightes Tale,"— 

For now is Palamon in al his wele 
Lyvynge in blisse, richesse and in hele, 
And Emelye him loveth so tendiiiy, 
And he hir serveth al so gentilly, 
That never was ther wordes hem betweene 
Of jealousy ne of non other tene. 



Poem XLVI. 

These lines are redolent of the warmth and freshness 
of a spring morning. The rigours of winter are past ; 
the storms that attend the equinox — coeli furor aequi- 
noctialis — have ceased to rave ; the west wind is blow- 
ing gently ; the scorching sun is beginning to be felt on 
the broad flat plains of Nicaea : Catullus must away. 
He is 4 in an ecstasy of joy at the prospect of leaving 
Bithynia and visiting the renowned cities of Asia. 

The tone of the last three lines is indicative of the 
warm affection which Catullus ever cherished for a worthy 
object. 



Poem XLVII. 

Catullus is ever ready to vent his ire against Piso and 
all his belongings. This poem, of little or no conse- 
quence in itself, is especially valuable as proving beyond 
a doubt that Cn. Calpurnius Piso, mentioned by Sallust, 



ILLUSTRATIVE NOTES. 223 

(Cat. cap. xix., &c.) was not the praetor in whose suite 
Verannius and Fabullus went to Spain. Cn. Calpurnius 
Piso, we know from Sallust, was killed when making a 
progress through his province. This Piso, we learn from 
the poem before us, actually returned with his ill-gotten 
gains and continued to sumptuously feast and entertain 
two of his minions, Porcius and Socration ; while he 
entirely discarded the two friends of Catullus. 



Poem XLVIII. 
Vide vii. and notes, supra. 



Poem XLIX. 

The circumstances in which these complimentary lines 
were addressed to the prince of Roman orators are 
entirely unknown to us. It appears certain, however, 
that the poet had been indebted to him for some service 
in which his oratorical powers had been called into play. 
Viewing these lines dispassionately, we see no grounds 
for thinking that Catullus lived on terms of intimacy 
with Cicero, as almost every editor and chance biogra- 
pher he has found would have us believe. They have 
nothing of the careless abandon or genial ring which we 
find in his poems to his intimate friends. They indicate 
the highest appreciation of the orator's talent and 
abilities, and breathe the feeling of gratitude : nothing 
more. 



224 EXCURSUS AND 



Poem L. 
This effusion, dashed off during a sleepless night, after a 
day of festive merriment, is in the poet's happiest vein. 

For notices of Licinius, see note to Carm. XIV. and 
Excursus to Carm. LI 1 1. 



Poem LI. a 

This is a vigorous translation of a portion of Sappho's 
famous ode (lipbs yvvaiKa £pu\x£vr\v) preserved by Longinus. 
If Catullus translated the last stanza, his version of it 
has perished. 

Carm. LI. 

Cf. with this poem, passim, the conclusion of Tennyson's 
"Eleanore" — 

I watch thy grace ; and in its place 
My heart a charmed slumber keeps, 

While I muse upon thy face ; 
And a languid fire creeps 

Through my veins to all my frame, 
Dissolvingly and slowly : soon 

From thy rose-red lips my name 
Floweth ; and then, as in a swoon, 
With dinning sound my ears are rife, 
My tremulous tongue faltereth, 
I lose my colour, I lose my breath, 
I drink the cup of a costly death, 
Brimmed with delirious draughts of warmest life. 
I die with my delight, before 

I hear what I would hear from thee ; 
Yet tell thy name again to me, 
I would be dying evermore, 
So dying ever, Eleanore. 



ILL USTRA TIVE NO TES. 225 



Excursus II. 
Carm. LI. b 

Otium, Catulle, tibi molestum est : 
Otio exultas nimiumque gestis. 
Otium et reges prius et beatas 
Perdidit urbes. 

This stanza is generally printed as part of the preceding poem. 
With regard to its merits and aptness as a conclusion to a trans- 
lation of Sappho's ode, different opinions are entertained. Doe- 
ring considers it quite in keeping with the rest of the poem, and 
adduces what he considers a parallel instance from Ovid (Rem. 
Amor. 135-151). The lines of Ovid, however, form part of an 
original poem ; these appear as the conclusion of a translation. 

But it is to one of his French biographers, l'Abbe Arnaud, 
that we must go for a superlative estimate of this stanza. We 
give his translation of the ode in question and remarks entire : — 
" ' Celui-la me parait egaler, et, s'il est possible, surpasser les 
dieux en bonheur, qui jouit de ta presence, de ton entretien et 
de ton sourire. Quant a moi, j'en ai perdu l'usage de tous mes 
sens. Au moment meme oil je t'ai vue, 6 Lesbie, je n'ai pu 
retrouver la parole ; ma langue est demeuree immobile ; un feu 
subtil a parcouru tout mon corps ; un bruit soudain s'est forme 
dans mes oreilles, et mes yeux se sont converts de te*nebres.' 
Quand tout a coup, honteux de sa situation, qu'il devait sans 
doute a une vie molle et desceuvree, il ajoute : ' Catulle, tu vois 
combien l'oisivete t'est funeste, et tu t'y plais, et tu l'aimes ! 
l'oisivete cependant a perdu les plus grands monarques et les 
plus florissants empires.' Je ne sais si je me trompe, mais cette 
reflexion soudaine, a la suite du delire de la passion me semble 
admirable; c'est un rayon qui, au moment oil Ton s'y attend le 
moins, perce le nuage et promet de le dissiper ; d'ailleurs ce 
mouvement me parait tout a fait selon la nature, qui, en accordant 
a l'homme une excessive sensibility, a voulu le distinguer de 
tous les autres etres sensibles par l'inestimable present de la 
raison et du pouvoir de la faire regner sur les actions et sur les 
pensees." 

The Abbe, it will be seen, considers the reflection admirable 

P 



226 EXCURSUS AND 

in the place which it occupies; but, notwithstanding his elo- 
quent defence of it, we fail to see its appropriateness. We have 
no fault to find with the reflection. Indeed, it might have been 
better for the fame of Catullus had he oftener moralised in this 
way. But, surely, this was not the place for such a thing. 
The stanza, moreover, is poor at best, and we should be sorry 
to think that Catullus was capable of appending such a piece of 
bathos to Sappho's glorious ode. 

It may be a fragment of a poem by Catullus, but most probably 
it is the work of some pedantic transcriber. The most cursory 
reader will see its value at once. 

CARM. LI. b 

Cf. Ovid. Rem. Amor. 135-144 — 

Ergo ubi visus eris nostrae medicabilis arti, 

Fac monitis fugias otia prima meis. 
Haec, ut ames, faciunt ; haec quod fecere, tuentur : 

Haec sunt jucundi causa cibusque mali. 
Otia si tollas, periere Cupidinis arcus, 

Contemtaeque jacent et sine luce faces. 
Quam platanus vino gaudet, quam populus unda, 

Et quam limosa canna palustris humo, 
Tarn Venus otia amat. Qui finem quaeris amoris — 

Cedit amor rebus — res age, tutus eris. 

Ease genders love and fosters it when born, 

Alike the cause and food of life's sweet thorn ; 

Dispel it, Cupid's shafts no longer fly ; 

Extinguished and despised his torches lie. 

As vines the plane, as streams the poplar please, 

As miry ground the reed, even so doth ease 

Glad love. Then, if a love-sick heart thou 'dst cure — 

Love yields to toil — toil hard and thou 'rt secure. 









ILL USTRA TIVE NOTES. 227 



Poem LI I. 

This quartette, if not the latest of the poems of Catullus, 
contains at least distinct mention of events later than any 
alluded to in his extant works. Vatinius held the con- 
sulship along with Ouintus Fusius Calenus, A.u.C. 707, 
(see Excursus to Carm. LI 1 1.) Catullus, if we are right 
m assuming A.u.C. 678 as the date of his birth, would at 
this time be about thirty years of age. 



Excursus III. 
Carm. LIIL 

Dii magnij salaputium disertum ! — (Verse 5.) 

The rhetorical powers of little Calvus — erat enim parvulus 
statura — were on this occasion exerted against Publius Vatinius, 
one of the most notorious villains and miscreants, according to 
Cicero, that ever cumbered the soil of any country. Starting in 
life as a political adventurer, Vatinius became quaestor B.C. 63, 
and tribune of the plebs B.C. 59. In the latter year he became 
the bought servant of Caesar, and afterwards witnessed against 
Milo and Sestius B.C. 56, a circumstance that called forth 
from Cicero, in a speech yet extant, one of the most severe 
castigations ever inflicted. He obtained the praetorship B.C. 55, 
and in the following year was accused of corruption by Calvus 
in the speech referred to in this poem. On this occasion he was 
defended by Cicero, a fact which does not redound very highly 
to the honour of that orator after his former oration. 

We are told by Seneca (Conitrov. III. cap. 19} that Calvus 
was so vehement in this impeachment, that Vatinius interrupted 
him and said to the judges : " Rogo vos, judices, si iste disertus 
est, ideo me damnari oportet ? " (I pray you, judges, because 
that man is eloquent, does it follow that I must be con- 
demned ?) 



228 EXCURSUS AND 

As an orator Calvus attained a high reputation. He was a 
most accurate speaker, and his compositions evinced great taste, 
delicacy, and polish. (Cic. de Clar. Orat. S. 283.) 

Quintilian tells us that some preferred him to all the orators 
of his time, while others were of opinion that he weakened his 
productions by combing them with a too unsparing hand. To 
imitate successfully the Attic orators was the highest aim of his 
ambition. (Quint, lib. x. I.) 

Tacitus, in his dialogue concerning oratory (Sect, xxxiv.), 
speaks of the oration against Vatinius, which Calvus made at 
the age of twenty-seven, in terms of the highest praise. Calvus 
was born B.C. 82, and died at the early age of thirty -five or 
thirty-six (B.C. 47 or 46). 



Poem LIV. 



This invective against Caesar, which Muretus considered 
intelligible only to a Sybil, has been invested with a con- 
siderable degree of point and meaning by Doering. It 
is still, however, far from being an elegant production. 

Rossbach, perhaps correctly, considers the lines frag- 
ments of two distinct poems. 



Poem LV. 
Of Camerius nothing is known. 

Carm. LV. 
Cf. with this poem, passim, Plaut. Amph. iv. I, 1-6 — 
Naucratem quern convenire volui in navi non erat : 
Neque domi, neque in urbe invenio quemquam, qui ilium viderit. 
Nam omneis plateas perreptavi, gymnasia et myropolia : 



ILL USTRA TIVE NO TES. 



Apud emporium, atque in macello, in palaestra atque in foro : 
In medicinis, in tonstrinis, apud omneis aedeis sacras, 
Sum defessus quaeritando, nusquam invenio Naucratem. 

I 'm seeking Naucrates : I 've tried the ship ; he is not there. 
At home, in town I 've found no one who 's seen him anywhere ; 
The streets, gymnasia, nard-shops all, I 've paced with weary 

foot, 
The emporium, meat-shops, wrestling-ground, and market-place 

to boot, 
I 've been through druggists', barbers' shops, and all the temples 

round : 
I 'm tired with searching : Naucrates is nowhere to be found. 

V. 1 8, 19. Si linguam clauso tenes in ore, 
Fructus projicies amoris omnes. 

Cf. Tibull. iv. 7, 1, 2— 

Tandem venit amor, qualem texisse pudori, 
Quam nudasse alicui sit mihi fama magis. 

Comes love at length, and, sooth, the honour's more 
To tell my flame, than, blushing, cloak it o'er. 



Poem LVI. 

These lines are probably addressed to Valerius Cato, 
poet and grammarian, (died B.C. 20). 



POEM LVII. 

For Caesar and Mamurra, see note to Carm. xxix., 
supra. 



230 EXCURSUS AND 



Poem LVIII. 

" Last scene of all 
That ends this strange eventful history." 

Carm. LVIII. v. 4. 

Nunc in quadriviis et angiportis. 

Cf. Hor. Od. i. 25, 10— 

Flebis in solo levis angiportu. 



Carm. LIX. v. 3, 4. 

Vidistis panem. 

Cf. Ter. Eun. iii. 2, 38— 

E flamma petere te cibum posse arbitror. 



Carm. LX. 

Cf. with this fragment, passim, Carm. lxiv. 154-156, and parallel 
reference cited in the notes. 



Poem LXI. 

After the lapse of nearly two thousand years, not only 
does this hymn retain all its pristine vigour and fresh- 
ness, but it still stands unrivalled in the domain of erotic 
poetry. The number of lively images presented to the 



ILL USTRA TLVE NOTES. 2 3 1 

reader is truly marvellous ; not less so are the splendour 
of the diction and the harmony of the numbers. Highly 
sensuous in expression, redolent of voluptuous feeling, 
warm as the blushes of the bride, and evincing through- 
out the liveliest friendship for the bridegroom, it ap- 
proaches nearer to perfection than any work of its class, 
whether of ancient or modern times. The English 
language, it is true, possesses one, which, if not so perfect 
as a work of art, is certainly transfused with a purer 
feeling and a nobler spirit. In this respect, however, 
they cannot be judged from the same point of view, inas- 
much as that of Spenser is the production of a Christian 
poet. 

Excursus IV. 

NUPTIAL SONGS AND NUPTIAL CEREMONIES. 

Carm. LXI. 

The nuptial songs of the ancients were, strictly speaking, of 
three distinct kinds. 

The first comprehended such as detailed the nuptial proces- 
sion, pomp, and rites, and the relative duties of the bridegroom 
and bride. In these the praises of the happy pair were sung and 
hearty wishes expressed for their happiness. Sometimes there 
was a contest between a chorus of youths and maidens, (as in 
the following poem), the youths arguing strongly for, and the 
maidens as strongly against, matrimony. Such a poem, how- 
ever, only related to what took place prior to the consummation 
of the nuptial ceremony, and was called among the Greeks 
HymenaeiiS) and among the Romans Thalassio. To this class, 
in one or other of its forms, belong all the nuptial songs of 
Catullus. 

Of the second kind was the epithalamium, properly so called, 
{iindaKd/jLLou KOLfjLrjTLKou), which was sung outside the bridal 
chamber after the bride and bridegroom had retired thither. 
Such, for example, is the 18th Idyllium of Theocritus, in which 
twelve Spartan virgins sing the praises of Menelaus and Helen. 



232 EXCURSUS AND 

The third kind was sung on the morning following the nup- 
tials, and was called the "matin chaunt" (kind ] a\d /.uov kyepTLKov). 
No specimen of this song has reached modern times. 

It would be quite foreign to our purpose to give a minute and 
detailed account of the nuptial ceremonies of the Greeks and 
Romans, but a few remarks explanatory of the poem under 
consideration, and illustrative of the customs and rites therein 
alluded to, may not be altogether impertinent. 

The tutelary god of marriage was Hymenaeus, and his name, 
in one formula or other, was the principal burden in all nuptial 
songs. The origin of his name is differently accounted for, 
some deriving it from one Hymenaeus of Argos, who had 
generously rescued some Athenian virgins from the hands of 
the Pelasgi ; some from the bridegroom and bride dwelling 
together (dird rod bfxov vaieiv), and others, perhaps correctly, 
from vfX7]v (membrana). 

The Roman word Thalassius or Thalassio, which occurs fre- 
quently in nuptial songs, is said to be as old as the time of 
Romulus. We are told by Livy, that, when a virgin was being 
taken along at the time of the rape of the Sabine women, her 
safety was ensured and the way cleared for her on her captors 
crying out Thalassio (for Thalassius). This personage was a 
senator, and, from the above mentioned circumstance, his name 
came to be intimately associated with the leading home of the 

bride. 

In this poem, Hymen, the patron of virtuous affection, is 
summoned from the Heliconian hill to escort the bride to the 
arms of the bridegroom, arrayed in the Flammeum, his locks 
crowned with flowers of marjoram, yellow sandals on his feet, 
and a pine-torch in his uplifted hand. 

The bride was invariably attired in an under garment (Regilla 
or Tunica recta), which was girt round her with a woollen girdle 
(Cingulum factum ex lana ovis). A yellow net (Reticulum 
luteum) confined her tresses, which were parted either with a 
spear or an instrument of that form (Hasta celibaris). Over her 
head and face she wore a flame-coloured veil (Flammeum), large 
enough to reach the ground, and on her feet were yellow 
slippers (Soccilutei). 

As she was conducted, thus attired, from her father's house to 



ILL USTRA TIVE NO TES. 233 

that of her betrothed, the nuptial song [Hymenaeus) was sung 
by her friends, who accompanied, the words with the music of 
flutes {Tibiae). She was attended by three boys, two of whom 
acted, as her supporters, the other preceded her carrying a haw- 
thorn torch {Spina alba). Another youth {Camillus) carried 
a basket containing the industrial implements of a Roman 
matron — distaff, spindle, &c. When the bride reached the 
vestibule of her future home, she wreathed the door-posts with 
fillets of sacred wool, and anointed them with oil or lard, after 
which she was carefully lifted over the threshold, lest by any 
chance she should make an ill-omened stumble. On entering 
she saluted the bridegroom with the words Ubi tu Cains ego 
Caia. She was then presented by him with fire and water, in 
token that all the necessaries of life should thenceforward be 
shared by them in common. 

The guests then partook of the banquet (Coena nuptialis), at 
the close of which nuts were scattered by the bridegroom as a 
proof that he had now relinquished the sports of his youth, and 
would henceforth act with the dignity becoming a married man. 
The banquet ended, the bride was escorted to the nuptial 
couch {Lectus geiiialis) by Promibae, bridesmatrons, who differed 
from the bridesmaids of modern times only in the respect that 
they were married ladies who had been united to only one 
husband ( Univirae) . When the pair had retired to the nuptial 
chamber {Thalamus), a chorus of maidens sang the epithalamium. 
On the following day the bride offered sacrifice on the domestic 
altar, and in the afternoon the bridegoom gave an entertainment 
{Repotia), which concluded the ceremonies. 

Carm. LXI. 

Compare this poem, passim, with the nuptial songs of Solomon, 
of Spenser, and of Tennyson, also, in passages, with Chaucer's 
" Boke of the Duchesse." 

V. 11-15. i 

Cf. Claudian Epith. Hon. et Mar.— 

Age, cuncta nuptiali 
Redimita vere tellus 



234 EXCURSUS AND 

Celebra toros heriles : 
Omne nemus cum fluviis, 
Omne canat profundum. 

Let all the earth be gay, 

And, clothed with flowers of spring, 

Loud raise the nuptial lay 
In honour of its king : 

Let woods and streams to-day, 
And seas with gladness sing. 

V. 16-20. 

Cf. Tibull. i. v. 43-46— 

Non facit hoc verbis, facie tenerisque lacertis 

Devovet et flavis nostra puella comis. 
Talis ad Haemonium Nereis Pelea quondam 
Vecta est fraenato caerula pisce Thetis. 

With spells ? no !— with fair shoulders, queenly charms, 
And golden locks she lit this witching flame : 

Lovely as to Haemonian Peleus' arms 
On bridled fish blue Nereid Thetis came. 

V- 34,35- 

Cf. Shakspeare, " Midsummer Night's Dream," Titania to 
Bottom — 

the female ivy so 

Enrings the barky fingers of the elm. 

V. 56, seqq. 

Cf. Claudian, Epith. Pallad. et Celer. 124, seqq. — 

Aggreditur Cytherea nurum, flentemque pudica 



Detraxit matris gremio : matura tumescit 

Virginitas, superatque nives ac lilia candor, 

Et patrium flavis testatur crinibus Istrum. 

Turn dextram complexa viri, dextramque puellae 

Tradit, et his ultro sancit connubia dictis : 

" Vivite Concordes, et nostrum discite munus." 






ILL USTRA TIVE NO TES. 2 3 5 

Then Cytherea bears away 

The weeping maid, whose pleading arms 
Cling to her modest mother's breast, 
And well, I ween, her looks attest 

The ripeness of her charms. 

The radiant whiteness of her face 

Outvies the lily and the snow, 
Her golden tresses plainly say 
That she beheld her natal day 

Where Ister's waters flow. 

And now she joins the lovers' hands, 

Sheds on them both a smile benign, 
And with these words she seals the bond : 
* ' Live, love, be yours a union fond, 

Enjoy what gifts are mine." 

V. 61-75. 

Cf. Claudian, same poem, 31-33 — 

Hunc Musa genitum legit Cytherea, ducemque 
Praefecit thalamis : nullum junxisse cubile 
Hoc sine, nee primas fas est attollere taedas. 

Venus chose the Muse's son 

O'er nuptial rites to reign supreme, 
And but for him no bridal bed 
Is blest : no brandished torches shed 
Their hymenaeal gleam. 

V. 79. Sed moraris : abit dies. 

Cf. Calpurn. Eclog. v. 120, 121— 

Sed jam sera dies cadit, et jam, sole fugato, 
Frigidus aestivas impellit Noctifer horas. 

Now pales the waning day, the sun is set, 
And eve's cool star impels the scorching hours. 



236 EXCURSUS AND 

V. 114-119. O cubile Gaudeat. 

Cf. Propert. iii. 7, I, 2, (ii. 15, 1, 2.)— 

O me felicem ! O nox mihi Candida, et O tu 
Lectule, deliciis facte beate meis ! 

O happy I ! O loveliest night of nights ! 
And thou, O bed, made blest by my delights ! 

V. 117, 118. quae vaga 

Nocte. 

Vaga is an epithet applied by the poets to anything that is borne 
along with perpetual motion (Doering). It is here, perhaps, 
merely ornamental (epit/ieton ornans). But Nox had a chariot 
as well as Sol, Luna, &c, and in this view it is peculiarly appro- 
priate. 

Cf. Theocr. Idyll, ii. 163-166— 

'AXXa tv /ikv ^cupoi^a ttot (bKeapbu rpeire 7rc6Xws, 
TLotvi' eyu 5' olaCo rbv e/xbv irbvov ticrirep virecrTap. 
Xa?/)6 "ZeXavala Xiwapoxpoe, x a ' L P ere kolWol 
'Acrrepes, evKakoLO /car' ai>Tvya Nu/cros diradoi. 

Then fare-thee-well, dread Lady ! turn thy coursers to the sea, 

Be sure my task I will achieve, however hard it be ; 

Yes, fare-thee-well, thou Lady Moon ! with face of shining 

light, 
Farewell, ye other stars that grace the car of silent Night ! ' 

And Tibull. ii. 1, 87-90— 

Ludite : jam Nox jungit equos, currumque sequuntur 

Matris lascivo sidera fulva choro, 
Postque venit tacitus furvis circumdatus alis 

Somnus et incerto S omnia nigra pede. 

Sport on : Night yokes her steeds : with wanton tread 
The golden stars behind her chariot wheel ; 

Then silent Sleep, with tawny wings outspread, 

And gloom-wrapt Dreams behind them tottering steal. 



ILLUSTRATIVE NOTES. * 237 

V. 172. Vir tuus Tyrio in toro. 

Cf. Tibull. i. 2, 73-76— 

Et te dum liceat teneris retinere lacertis, 
Mollis et inculta sit mihi somnus humo. 

Quid Tyrio recubare toro sine amore secundo, 
Prodest, cum fletu nox vigilanda venit ? 

So while thy form my fond, fond arms retain, 
Be on the uncultured ground my slumbers light ; 

Why press the Tyrian couch, if love disdain, 
And spend in tears the livelong weary night ? 

V. 211-225. 

Cf. Stat. Silv. i. 2, 271-273 — 

quumque tuos tacito Natura recessu 

Formarit vultus, multum de patre decoris, 
1 Plus de matre feras. 

When Nature, with mysterious hand, shall mould 

The tiny features cf thine infant face, 
May we thy father's beauty there behold, 

And more than all thy mother's matchless grace. 

Tibull. i. 7, 55, 56— 

At tibi succrescat proles, quae facta parentis 
Augeat et circa stet veneranda senem. 

And may a race be thine, to swell thy deeds, 
And stand in honour round their aged sire. 

Mart. Epigr. vi. 27, 3, 4— 

Est tibi, quae patria signatur imagine vultus, 
Testis maternae nata pudicitiae. 

To thee 
A child is born, the image of her sire, 
Sure witness of her mother'sxhastity. 



238 EXCURSUS AND 

And Theoc. Idyll, xvii. 43, 44 — 

'Ajrdpyov 5e yvvcuKos eir aWoTpty v6os alei, 
"PqidLOL 5e yovai, reKva 5' ov iroreoLKora irarpi. 

But an unloving woman's thoughts aye round the stranger gather, 
Her parturitions too are light — her sons unlike their father. 



Poem LXII. 

This nuptial song is probably an imitation of one of 
the lost hymenaeals of Sappho. The youths (sponsi 
aequales) are still reclining at the festal board of the 
bridegroom, when the rising of Vesper reminds them that 
the jubilant ceremonial is at hand. The bride meanwhile 
is being escorted home by a band of maidens (virginis 
aequales), who are now rapidly approaching the gates. 
After a few words from their respective leaders, calculated 
to excite feelings of emulation, the maidens fiercely 
denounce Vesper, while the youths as lustily proclaim 
his praises. The exceeding beauty and fitness of the 
relative parts of the poem are so apparent that remark 
on them by the translator would be superfluous. 

Carm. LXII. v. 5. 

Hymen, O Hymenaee ! Hymen ades O Hymenaee ! 
Cf. Theoc. Idyll, xviii. 59 — 

V. 7. Nimirum Oetaeos ostendit noctifer ignes. 

Cf. Virg. Eclog. viii. 30 — 

tibi deserit Hesperus Oetam. 

For thee the star of eve leaves Oeta's hill. 



ILL US TEA TIVE NO TES. 239 

V. 26. Hespere, qui coelo lucet jucundior ignis. 
Cf. Horn. II. xxii. 318— 

"Bcrirepos, 6s koWkttos kv ovpav(£ lo-tcltcu &GTr)p. 

Bion. xvi. 1 — 

"Hairepe, rds iparas xP^ a€0P <P&o$ ' A(ppoyeveias. 
Virg. Aen. viii. 589-591 — 

Qualis, ubi oceani perfusus Lucifer unda, 
Quern Venus ante alios astrorum diligit ignes, 
Extulit os sacrum coelo, tenebrasque resolvit. 

And Statii Silv. ii. 6, 36, 37 — 

quantum praecedit clara minores 

Luna faces, quantumque alios premit Hesperus ignes. 

V. 42. Multi ilium pueri, multae optavere puellae. 

Cf. Ovid. Met. iii. 353 — 

Multi ilium juvenes, multae cupiere puellae. 

V. 44. Nulli ilium pueri, nullae optavere puellae. 

Cf. Ovid. Met. iii. 355— 

Nulli ilium juvenes, nullae tetigere puellae. 



Poem LXIII. 

This poem— the grandest alike in conception and in 
execution of all the works of Catullus — is the only 
specimen of Galliambic poetry in the whole range of 
Latin literature. 

Atys, the subject of the poem, is a beautiful youth, 
who, under the influence of a fearful frenzy, repairs with 



240 EXCURSUS AND 

a chosen band of followers to the forests and mountain 
fastnesses of Phrygia, to celebrate the inhuman orgies of 
Cybele, the guardian goddess of the land. 

From the opening lines, and from repeated passages 
throughout the poem, it may safely be inferred that this 
is not the celebrated Phrygian shepherd of the name so 
often mentioned by Greek and Roman mythologists, but 
most probably a Grecian youth of noble birth, who, 
carried away by an insane religious fervour, crossed to 
Phrygia to perform the awful rites practised by the 
votaries of the Queen of Dindymus. The subject and 
its treatment are in every sense original, and the Galli- 
ambic metre, being endless in its modifications, has 
afforded the poet ample scope for delineating the varied 
feelings and emotions of the unhappy youth. The frenzy 
of the votary ; the raving madness of his Maenad crew ; 
the dull languor of Atys consequent on his excitement ; 
his withering despair on awaking to a sense of his de- 
grading and hopeless servitude ; his heart-rending wail 
on the recollection of his parents, his home, and the 
sports of his youfch ; the fierce ire of Cybele on learning 
the repentance of the recreant wretch, and his flight 
back to the dreary dens of Ida — are portrayed with a 
terrible power, that conjures up before our eyes the heart- 
rending spectacle in all the terrors of a living reality. 

The accessories of time, place, and circumstance, 
moreover, are wondrously in keeping with the subject. 
Dancing and revelry occupy the dusky evening ; dark- 
ness brings its balm to the wearied orgiast ; the glories 
of sunrise awaken him to mock his misery ; whilst the 
vast ocean below, the snow-capt Ida above, the stag 
bounding through the brushwood, and the boar rushing 
from the thicket, furnish the drapery for the scene of 
woe. In short, the originality, grandeur, and poetic 






ILL USTRA TIVE NO TES. 2\ I 

spirit of the Atys, stamp Catullus as a genius of the 
highest order. 

Few poets would have dared to strike »the lyre for such 
a subject, fewer still could have risen to the requirements 
of the theme. Julius Scaliger, who had no liking for 
Catullus, was constrained to pronounce this poem divine; 
while Gibbon, in his "Decline and Fall," has spoken of 
it with unbounded admiration. Critics of our time do 
not scruple to tell us that it is probably a translation, 
but it were surely but bare justice to allow Catullus 
the authorship till something resembling it at least 
in subject and treatment is discovered in another lan- 
guage. We do not deny that he may have been to a 
certain extent indebted to his journey to the East for 
the groundwork of his poem, and that there he may 
have derived materials for its composition, but that, 
instead of being an argument against, is in our opinion 
the strongest one for, its originality. Be that as it may, 
it is a gorgeous memorial of a primeval worship. In 
its abrupt turns, broken cadences, and rattliifg pace, 
it is like the live thunder leaping from crag to crag over 
mountains wrapt in the impenetrable gloom of chaos and 
of night. 

The final fate of the hapless wretch draws from Catullus 
the earnest prayer that he may never be the victim of 
such a frantic inspiration ; while it has furnished Ovid 
with an appropriate curse in his fearful chapter of im- 
precations : * — 

Mayst thou in Phrygian mode, like those whom awful Cybele 

incites, 
Thy worthless members hack and hew. crazed votary of frantic 

rites, 

* Ibis, 451-454- 



242 EXCURSUS AND 

Nor man nor woman be, but, Atys-like, a sexless wretch be- 
come, 

And rattle with effeminate fingers on the hollow- sounding 
drum. 

It would be futile to attempt to reproduce the Atys 
in an English dress in anything like its fire, impetuous 
roll, and gorgeous imagery. The highest aim of a 
translator can be little more than to give a tolerably 
accurate rendering of the words. Several Latin poems 
have been attempted in modern times in Galliambic 
measure, but all of them with indifferent success. Nor 
is this to be wondered at, when we consider the extra- 
ordinary merits of the only model. Perhaps the best 
known Galliambic poem of modern days is by Muretus, 
of which we subjoin a translation : — 

BACCHUS. 

My hair with ivy chaplets bound, I sing the father of the vine, 
Lyaeus, Bromius, Evius, thigh-sprung, ever-young, whose power 

divine 
Made vine-trees flourish, and new gifts shower'd on the world 

where'er they are — 
New gifts to drive from weary hearts the carking cares of life 

afar. 

O sire ! O two-horn'd sire ! for thee in mystic revel on we dash, 
Thou slayer of the giant race, for thee the cymbals loud we 

clash, 
For thee we wear dishevell'd hair, for thee we raise the jocund 

song, 
For thee we toss our heads about, and the steep mountains 

course along. 

The dreary forest haunts are moved, and echo back our hymns 

to thee, 
Evoe ! who givest sweet repose, and sett'st the troubled spirit 

free, 



ILL USTRA TIVE NO TES. 243 

Where'er thou dwellest lovely Venus has her flower-wreath'd 

temple there, 
And tender Love, and Jest, and sprightly Mirth to swell thy 

train repair. 

With fife and blare of horn the ambient air resounds, the dancers 

reel, 
And baleful griefs and hateful cares afar with rapid footstep 

steal. 
Ye ministers, here place the cups, and fill them to the brim with 

wine, 
That I may slake my thirst and sate me with the purple juice 

divine. 

'Twere sinful with dry lips to celebrate thy sacred mystic 
rites. 

Yah ! Yah ! light-giving sire ! what ardour now my burning 
heart excites ! 

A thousand strange undreamt-of lights burst on my heaven- 
illumined eyes, 

Behold ! behold ! how now the grove all round with rapid 
whirlings flies. 

See how the ground, beat in the wild careerings, starts and 
shakes, 

And now the blare of horns upon my ears with sounds un- 
wonted breaks. 

Hence ye profane ! the god ! the god comes hurrying with his 
pliant lash in hand, 

Guiding the dappled lynx and tiger fierce obedient to command. 

Old rubicund Silenus, and the Satyrs' cloven-footed crew, 
And troops of yelling Bacchants with impetuous steps the god 

pursue, 
Evoe ! great Bassareus ! for ever to be feared, thrice, four times 

blest 
Is he who plies thy rites, and. shakes the ivied Thyrsus, scorning 

rest. 



244 EXCURSUS AND 

When thy fair mother, thunder-blasted, prematurely gave thee 
birth, 

Jove bore thee in his thigh, lest incensed Juno should thee hurl 
to earth, 

Then gave thee to be reared and cherished by the woodland- 
roaming sprites — 

The nymphs who .skip with nimble foot o'er Nysa's lofty moun- 
tain heights. 

In childhood's days, where'er thy genial foot had trod, there 

round the trees 
The circling vine its tender tendrils wound and flaunted in the 

breeze, 
And where you play'd with youthful frolic, there the wine-fount 

'gan to spring, 
And smoothly flow'd the purple stream with low and gentle 

murmuring. 

Why should I tell of Indian climes by thee to mild subjection 

brought ? 
The sinful deeds that Pentheus and Lycurgus in their madness 

wrought ? 
Or the strange monsters that appear'd within the blue Etruscan 

sea? 
How could thy glories e'er be sung — thy trophies reckon'd up 

by me ? 

Tmolus, Cythaeron, Nisa felt thy power, and own'd thee as their 

lord ; 
Minstrels and poets celebrate thy majesty with one accord ; 
Whene'er thy nectar has been quaff 'd the flame of genius fires 

the brain ; 
A-sudden all around resounds the music of the inspired strain. 

Away from thee no joy, no sweet hilarity the soul can find, 
Thcu liftest care and sorrow's heavy burden from the weary 
mind. 



ILL USTRA TIVE NOTES. 245 

All foolish shame thou dost efface, thou dost reveal the secret 

way ; 
Victorious o'er love's battle-plains thou rid'st — the darkness is 

thy day. 

Then come, our father ! come, our king ! come, glory of the 

vaulted sky ! 
Oh, hither, hither come, and look on us with mild benignant 

eye. 

Excursus V. 

GALLIAMBUS. 

The Galli are said to have received their name from the river 
Gallus in Phrygia — the cradle of the worship of Cybele. In 
their wild orgies they scoured the mountains and solitary places, 
goading themselves to frenzy with the lash (Ilagelhim), and ac- 
companying their frantic song {Galliambus) with the music of 
cymbals, timbrels, and Phrygian flutes. The Galliambus, alike 
in structure and spirit, seems to be intimately connected with 
the ancient Grecian Dithyramb, the largest extant specimen of 
which is by Pindar, and has been preserved by Dionysius of 
Halicarnassus. Although Greece had many Dithyrambic poets, 
but few specimens of their songs have reached us, and the brevity 
of those which remain precludes the possibility of attaining any- 
thing like an accurate idea of the nature and structure of the 
verse. It was a wild and animated strain, and the buoyant 
spirit of the Greeks, and their musical and flexible language 
were peculiarly favourable to its development. 

But the genius of the stern and severe Roman, and the un- 
bending nature of his stately tongue must have proved antago- 
nistic to its success, and it does not seem, notwithstanding 
Cicero's assertion to the contrary, ever to have been very 
popular with the poets of Rome. Horace has some noble 
lyrics — the very essence of impassioned poetry, and thoroughly 
Dithyrambic in spirit, but they are executed according to a 
regular system, and not in what we conceive to have been the 
mode of the Dithyramb, properly so called. One Latin Dithy- 



246 EXCURSUS AND 

rambic chorus, however, apparently genuine in spirit and treat- 
ment, is to be found in the Oedipus of Seneca. The Atys is, 
as we have said, the only extant specimen of Galliambic verse ; 
and as it consists of only ninety-three lines, and these very 
variable in their structure, it is impossible to reduce it to any 
certain scheme of versification. Most probably it is to be 
referred to the same class as the Dithyramb of Pindar, of which 
Horace says : — 

. . . . Numerisque fertur 

Lege solutis, 

and hence it were vain to try to reduce it to a system accord- 
ing to the canons of prosody. Like the Dithyramb, too, it 
was set in the Phrygian mode, and delighted in compound and 
anomalous epithets {nova verba). This latter feature is clearly 
exemplified in the Atys, as witness the compounds hederigerae, 
properipidem, sonipedibus, herifugae, sylvicultrix, &c. 

Carm. LXIII. v. 5. 

Devolsit silice. 

Of. Ovid. Fast. iv. 233-244— 

Hie furit, et credens thalami procumbere tectum 

Effugit, et cursu Dindyma summa petit. * 
Etmodo "Tolle faces!'' "Remove" modo "verbera"! clamat. 

Saepe Palaestinas jurat adesse deas. 
Hie etiam saxo corpus laniavit acuto, 

Longaque in immundo pulvere tracta coma est. 
Voxque fuit " Merui ! meritas do sanguine poenas, 

A ! pereant partes quae nocuere mihi ! " 
"A! p> ereant >" dicebat adhuc, onus inguinis aufert 

Nullaque sunt subito signa relicta viri. 
Venit in exemplum furor hie, mollesque ministri 

Caedunt jactatis vilia membra comis. 

Then madness fastens on the youth — he thinks the roof will 

crash, and tremulous 
Springs forth, and in his flight ascends the highest peaks of 

Dindymus. 



ILL USTRA TIVE NO TES. 247 

And now "Remove the brands," he cries, and now "hence 

with the lash, begone ! " 
Often he swears the Furies at his heels are madly pressing on. 
Then picks he up a pointed flint and maims his form with gashes 

vile, 
And in the foul and miry dust his flowing tresses trail the while. 
Aloud he cries, " With this my blood meet penalty I pay; 'tis 

right, 
Perish the parts that wrought my sin, — perish they from my 

loathing sight." 
" Ah ! perish they !" again he cried, and then his sex away he 

shore, 
And not a single trace remain'd to tell what Atys was before. 
Hence, in all after-time, the mad effeminate crew, in wild despair, 
Hack with the flints their members vile, and toss aloft their 

streaming hair. 

V. 62, 63. 

I have here followed the text of Schwabius — 

Quod enim genus figuraest ego non quod obierim ? 
Ego mulier, ego adolescens, ego ephebus, ego puer. 

V. 65, 66. . 

Mihi januae frequentes, mihi limina tepida, 
Mihi floridis corollis redimita domus erat. 

Cf. Lucret. iv. II 73-1 175 — 

At lacrimans exclusus amator limina saepe 
Floribus et sertis operit, postesque superbos, 
Ungit amaracino, et foribus miser oscula figit. 

Propert. i. 16, 21, 22 — 

Nullane finis erit nostro concessa dolori, 
Tristis et in tepido limine somnus erit ? 

Tibull. i. 2, 13, 14 — 

Te meminisse decet, quae plurima voce peregi 
Supplice, cum posti florida serta darem. 



248 EXCURSUS AND 

think of all the vows that o'er and o'er 

1 breathed with suppliant voice when all thy door 
I hung with flowery garlands. 

And Theoc. Idyll, ii. 152 — 

Kcu cpdro 61 areepdvoLcri rd dio/nara tt\v<x irvK&aSeiv. 

V- 92, 93. Procul rabidos. 

Cf. Tibull. i. 4, 67-70— 

At qui non audit Musas, qui vendit amorem, 
Idaeae currus ille sequatur Opis, 

Et tercentenas erroribus expleat urbis, 
Et secet ad Phrygios vilia membra modos. 

May those who scorn the Muse, and sell their love, 
The chariot of Idaean Ops pursue, 

Careering, through three hundred cities rove, 
And to the Phrygian notes their members hew. 






Poem LXIV. 

The " Peleus and Thetis " is a beautiful legendary poem, 
which Catullus has invested with all the charm and 
natural grace of Homeric song. 

It partakes more of the nature of an Idyll or little Epos 
than of an Epithalamium, and if tried according to any 
other standard it will assuredly suffer, as unity or har- 
mony in design seems to have been no part of the poet's 
purpose. 

The episode of Ariadne occupies fully more than the 



ILL US TRA TI VE NO TES. 249 

half of the poem, and, as it is into it that the poet has 
thrown his greatest strength, its effect exceeds that pro- 
duced by the subject proper. 

The poem opens with a brief allusion to the object of 
the Argonautic Expedition, and the building of the good 
ship Argo under the auspices of Athena. As soon as 
the virgin craft is bounding over the deep, the Nereids, 
astounded at the invasion of their hitherto undisputed 
dominion, start from their ocean-caves. The mortal is 
face to face with the immortal, and both are smitten 
with desire. Peleus is entranced with love for Thetis, 
and the daughter of the fair-haired Tethys does not 
spurn his hand. They are betrothed, the immortal 
parents of the fair immortal consenting to the union. 

The poet, after duly invoking the heroes of the expe- 
dition, the ship in which they sailed on their perilous 
errand, and Peleus "the stay of Thessaly," details the 
preparations for the nuptials. The friends of Peleus, 
bearing with them rich offerings, hasten to Pharsalus to 
do honour to the .illustrious pair. High, and low hold 
jubilee, neglecting for the time their various concerns 
and avocations. The palace is adorned in a style of 
unequalled magnificence ; gold and silver and ivory 
shine on wall and couch and board ; but the great 
attraction is the gorgeous coverlet of the nuptial couch 
(Lectus genialis), on which is portrayed, among other 
things, with singular art and effect, the heroic legend of 
Theseus and Ariadne. 

The poet, for a while, leaves his proper theme to 
relate the touching story as there told. This episode 
may be looked upon as his greatest effort, if we except 
the magnificent poem on Atys. From the moment 
that we are introduced to the anguish-wrung maiden 
on the barren shore of Naxos, till the appearance of 



250 EXCURSUS AND 

Bacchus and his crew, the interest never flags. Whether 
the poet leads us back to her hours of guileless girl- 
hood, when, in the bosom of her family, she grows up 
like a myrtle on the banks of the Eurotas ; or pictures 
her on the arrival of Theseus in Crete, smitten with love 
for the valorous youth, dowering him with life and glory, 
and confiding to him her young warm heart with all the 
ardour of trusting but misgiven devotion ; or bids her 
denounce, in the acme of misery, the villain who had 
lured her from her home and left her to perish, the mind 
is enchained, the heart spontaneously sympathises, and 
the whole soul is thrilled with emotions that make us 
forget the poet and realise the scene. The skilful versi- 
fier may please the critical taste, his " callida junctura " 
may charm the ear, but it is the poet alone who can 
make us feel the joy or sorrow, the ecstasy or anguish of 
another. 

Into this episode Catullus naturally introduces the 
parting of Aegeus and Theseus, and, though pathos is 
the chief characteristic of this part of the poem, we have 
no more pleasing instance of it than that evinced in the 
parting words of Aegeus to his son. By introducing 
this scene, and afterwards rendering due retribution to 
Theseus at the hand of Heaven, Catullus has shown us 
how far impartial recompense transcends partial re- 
paration. 

Ovid, in one of the passages appended below, has 
united Theseus in happy nuptials with Bacchus ; Catul- 
lus, though he had an excellent opportunity, has re- 
frained from so doing, and consequently, as Dunlop 
well observes, " he leaves the pity we feel for the aban- 
donment of Ariadne unweakened on the mind." Still 
the blooming Bacchus and his crew, elsewhere portrayed 
on the embroidered coverlet, help to wean us from the 
hapless maiden. Catullus merely hints at the motive of 



ILL USTRA TIVE NO TES. 2 5 I 

Bacchus, and immediately finds a congenial theme in 
describing the revelries and orgies of his votaries. We 
may remark that it is here that the poet most nearly 
approaches the spirit and wild grandeur of the Atys ; in 
fact, it is only the difference in the measure that con- 
stitutes the difference in degree. 

He is now prepared to return to the gay festivities of 
the spousals. But. ere the demigods and gods appear, 
it is meet that mortals should retire. Catullus in a few 
lines of transcendent beauty, in which he compares the 
withdrawal of the visitors to the retreating waves of 
ocean on the dawn of a summer morn, clears the palace, 
and the Centaur Chiron, the dweller on Pelion, who was 
one day to be the tutor of Achilles, 'comes with offerings 
of random-wreathed flowers from the. hills and dales and 
river-banks of Thessaly. 

Peneus next, a kinsman of the bride, and greatest of 
Thessalian river gods, comes with an appropriate gift of 
trees, wherewith to adorn the doors and vestibule of the 
palace. 

Then enters rock-chained Prometheus, to whom Peleus 
was in great measure indebted for his bride. These demi- 
gods Catullus has chosen with great art and discern- 
ment, as each of them is in some respect connected either 
with the bride or bridegroom. After these comes Jupiter 
himself, attended by all the blessed immortals except 
Phoebus and Diana. The old poets of Greece tell us that 
all the deities were present except Ate, the goddess of dis- 
cord, who was not invited. Catullus, with a clearer poetic 
insight and a nobler appreciation of the prescient char- 
acter of Apollo, has excluded him from the number of the 
guests. The god of prophecy knew that he would slay their 
offspring, and Diana, as the goddess of chastity, would 
have been out of place ; but, apart from these considera- 
tions, Catullus expressly tells us that they hated Peleus. 



252 EXCURSUS AND 

The nuptial board is spread, the guests are seated ; and 
the Parcae, while they spin the threads of fate, sing with 
shrill voices the v destinies of the pair, and the prowess, 
achievements, and doom of their son. It is a splendid 
hymn, and its ever-recurrent refrain gives a wild and 
sombre effect to the prophetic canticle. Here, strictly 
speaking, ends the poem in so far as it concerns Peleus 
and Thetis. The poet, however, cannot conclude with- 
out contrasting the innocence and happiness of a brighter 
past with the guilt and misery of his own time. These 
concluding lines have a peculiar interest, for not only do 
they form a most appropriate epilogue, but they afford 
us the only instance of moral reflection in the works of 
our poet. 

One word as to the claims of this poem to originality. 
Like the Atys, it is said by some to bear evidence of 
translation from the Greek. Hesiod, we know, wrote 
an Epithalamium in honour of Peleus and Thetis, but, 
as the poem of Catullus cannot be classed under that 
head, we may conclude that it is not an imitation or 
translation of it. Moreover, it is not in Hesiod's manner. 
Cicero, certainly, in one of his letters to Atticus, quotes 
a fragment from a Greek poet, of which the mth 
line of this poem is a literal translation. It is possible 
that Catullus may have* drawn extensively from that 
unknown author, but, considering the number of his 
lines that bear more or less resemblance to passages in 
many of the Greek poets, we will probably be nearer the 
truth if we conclude with Doering that Catullus has 
closely imitated no one writer, but rather, like Horace, 

" apis Matinae 
More modoque," 

has fluttered through the gardens of the Greeks, and ex 
tracted the choicest honey from their flowers. 






ILL USTRA TIVE NO TES. 2 5 3 



Excursus VI. 

ARIADNE AS TREATED BY OVID. 

Ovid has four times treated the subject of Ariadne — viz., in 
the "Art of Love," the " Heroides," the " Fasti," and the 
"Metamorphoses;" and in all of them he has in expression 
borrowed extensively from the episode in the " Peleus and 
Thetis." The first of these (A. A. i. 527-564) is undoubtedly 
a piece ol very high merit, and is more than any of the others 
in the manner of Catullus. The barren shore of Naxos, the 
loneliness and anguish of Ariadne, her disordered person, her 
unutterable terror at the sudden appearance of Bacchus and his 
crew, the wild revelry of the Bacchanalians, and the seizure of 
the fainting maiden by the enamoured god, are depicted with 
great naturalness and effect. Here we have none of the quibbles 
and artificial points that are painfully apparent in two of the 
other pieces, and which, besides marring the general effect, are 
inconsistent with all ideas of 

"Ariadne passioning 
For Theseus' perjuries and unjust flight." 

In such compositions we look not for point and finished sar- 
casm ; we only expect despair, reproach, and anguish — the vehe- 
ment, spontaneous utterances of a breaking heart. 

The Epistle (Her. x.) is unfortunately far too minute, and 
labours under the disadvantage of being read, as it were, second- 
hand. 

The extract from the "Fasti," (lib. hi. 459-516,) which 
treats of the desertion of Ariadne by Bacchus, their reconcilia- 
tion, and her apotheosis, has more energy than the last, but is 
overloaded with poetical conceits. 

The passage from the "Metamorphoses" (lib. viii. 174-182,) 
consists of only a few lines, and is introduced by Ovid in his great 
poem for a specific purpose. It is quite free from the defects 
of the two pieces noticed immediately before ; and it is matter 
of regret that Ovid has not left us an Ariadne, in extenso, in the 
fine hexameters of which he was such a perfect master. Elegiac 



254 EXCURSUS AND 

verse was hardly suited to a continued stretch of vehement 
passion and agonised denunciation. For comparison with the 
Ariadne of Catullus we subjoin the following translations : — 

Artis Amat., lib. i. 527-564. 

Along the unknown sands the frantic Gnosian maiden roam'd, 
Where wild by Dia's little isle the dashing billow foam'd ; 
Loose-robed as when from sleep she rose, her heaving bosonv 

bare, 
Foot-naked, o'er her shoulders stream' d her golden-colour'd 

hair; 
She shouted, " Cruel Theseus," by the waves all deaf and cold, 
While down her tender cheeks the bitter tears of anguish roll'd, 
Shouted and wept at once ; yet both she did with seemly grace, 
Nor did the tearful torrent mar the beauty of her face. 
Now beating with her palms her breasts, that, ah ! too tender 

seem'd, 
" The wretch has fled me ; what will now become of me?" she 

scream' d, 
"What will become of me?" Along the shore the cymbals 

clash' d, 
Loud boom'd the timbrel's airy round, with quivering fingers 

dash'd. 
Froze on her tongue the half-lipp'd words ; with fear she 

swoon'd away; 
No trace of blood remain'd within that form of hueless clay. 
Lo ! there the Mimalonian dames scud with dishevell'd hair, 
Lo ! the light-tripping Satyr crew before the god repair ; 
Drunk old Silenus, on his crook-back'd ass, drives on the train ; 
Scarce can he keep his seat, though holding firmly by the mane*. 
Now he pursued the Bacchants, now pursued they him, now 

fled; 
Anon with lash the unsteady rider plied his quadruped, 
Till o'er the brute's long ears the swaggering creature headlong 

flies; 
The Satyrs shout around him : " Up ! O father ! up ! arise ! " 
Now in his grape-wreathed car the wine-god hurried on amain, 
And to his harness'd tigers freely gave the golden rein. 



ILLUSTRATIVE NOTES. 255 

Colour, memory, utterance, forsook the frenzy-stricken maid, 
Thrice flight she sought, and thrice with fear her trembling feet 

were stay'd. 
She shook, as shakes before the stormy wind the wheaten 

ear, 
Or as the fragile reed that quivers in the marshy mere. 
To whom the god : "Lo ! here I come, a spouse more leal to 

thee, 
" Fear not, O Gnosian girl, the wife of Bacchus thou shalt be ; 
Be heaven thy dower, in yonder sky thou 'It beam a radiant 

star, 
" And oft the Cretan Crown will guide the doubtful mariner." 
He spoke ; and, lest the tigers should her timid heart affright, 
Leap'd from his chariot, dashed across the sand with footstep 

light, 
And clasp'd her to his bosom, powerless to resist his nod, 
Then bore her off — how easy all, if willing be the god. 
Some "Hymen" sing, some "Evoe" shout, caressing and 

carest, 
Soon lie the maiden and the god in holy nuptials blest. 

Ovid. Her. x. (45-64. ) 

45 What could I do but let mine eyes outpour the bitter tear, 

When o'er the boundless waste they saw thy canvas dis- 
appear ? 

Now o'er the wilderness I wandered with dishevell'd hair, 

Like Bacchant by the wine-god roused to frenzied, dark 
despair ; 

Now, gazing forward on the sea, sat frozen on the stone ; 
50 My seat a stone— a stone myself — I motionless made moan ; 

And then I sought the couch again on which we both re- 
clined, 

It could not render back its trust — no — thee I could not 
find. 

I touch' d the prints thy feet had made — 'twas all I could 
for thee ; 

I touch'd the bed thy limbs had warm'd, when thou wast 
there with me. 



256 EXCURSUS AND 

55 I laid me down — my flowing tears stream'd on the couch 
like rain ; 

We both have press'd thee, I exclaimed, give back, give 
back the twain ! 

A pair we here together came — why not depart a pair ? 

Perfidious couch ! where is the greater part of me, oh where ? 

What shall I do ? where shall I go forlorn ? oh wretched 
fate! 
60 No trace of man or beast is here, the isle is desolate ; 

Its every shore sea-girdled round. A sailor ? there is none. 

A ship to brave the dangerous ways ? Alas ! there is not 
one ! 

Grant that I had companions, winds, a ship at my com- 
mand : 

What then ? my kindred would debar me from my native 
land. 

(99-132.) 

99 Would that Androgeos still had lived ! nor thou, Cecro- 

pian land, 
Hadst e'er atoned for his foul fate with victims from thy 

strand, 
Nor, Theseus, that thy strong right arm, with club of 

gnarled oak, 
Had dealt against the Minotaur the murder-freighted stroke ; 
Nor that my hands had brought the thread — a gift thou 

didst not spurn — 
And placed within thy reach what means ensured thy safe 

return. 
105 Yet surely I should marvel not that victory crown' d thy 

toil, 
And that the prostrate monster stain'd with gore the Cre- 
tan soil ; 
For never could his horns transfix a heart of hardest steel, 
No, though thou hadst no corselet, all secure thou still 

mightst feel, 
For in thy breast thou hadst nor flint nor adamant alone, 
no But thou hadst Theseus too, and he is harder far than 

stone. 



ILLUSTRATIVE NOTES. 257 

O cruel sleep ! why held'st thou seal'd my weary orbs of 
sight ? 

Yet would that I had then been whelm' d in everlasting 
night ! 

O cruel winds ! too favouring thus to let the villain go, 

And gales ! officious but to plunge my soul in deepest woe. 
115 O cruel right hand! that my brother slew and murder'd 
me, 

And troth pledged at my loving quest, a name ! a mockery ! 

Sleep, winds, and troth have all conspired against a hap- 
less maid, 

And by a triple treason thus I singly am betray'd. 



And shall I die, nor see a mother's tears of pity more ? 
120 Shall no kind fingers close mine eyes when life's last 

struggle 's o'er? 
Breathed on a foreign air shall my sad spirit leave my 

breast ? 
Nor friendly hands anoint my limbs for ever laid at rest ? 
And shall my bones be pick'd by ravenous birds that scour 

the sea ? 
Is such a grave meet recompense for all I 've done for thee ? 



125 Thou'lt seek Cecropia's ports; and, welcomed to thy 
native land, 
When, glory-crown'd, before thy wondering, gape-mouth'd 

crowd thou 'It stand, 
And proudly tell how thou the savage Minotaur didst slay, 
And paint his rocky dwelling cut with many a dubious 

way, 
Tell, too, thou'st left a luckless girl on this lone strand to 
pine ; 
130 That deed should form some title to the fame that will be 
thine. 
Aegeus was not thy father, Aethra ne'er gave birth to thee ; 
132 The authors of thy being were the rocks and ruthless sea. 

R 



258 EXCURSUS AND 



Ovid. Fast. (459-516.) 

459 On the succeeding night the Gnosian crown thou wilt 

descry. 
Through Theseus' cruel wrong the Gnosian maiden reach'd 

the sky ; 
She, who had saved her thankless spouse with clew of 

slender thread, 
Had now well changed her perjured lord's for youthful 

Bacchus' bed. 
Proud of her lot, why did I weep, poor rustic girl? she 

said, 
His very perfidy has shower'd rare honours on my head. 

465 Meanwhile the tribes of Ind the hair-trimm'd god could 

not withstand, 
And, booty-laden, home he comes from that far eastern 

land, 
And 'mong the maids of radiant form — the rosy victor's 

prize — 
One girl, the daughter of their king, found favour in his 

eyes. 
Then wept his loving wife, and, roaming o'er the curved 

shore •" 

470 With streaming hair, such words as these did Ariadne 

pour : 

"Ye waves ! again to like complaints, oh lend your listen- 
ing ears ! 

Lo ! once again, ye sands ! I pray, receive my bitter tears. 

Once cried I — words remember'd well — ' false Theseus and 
accurst ; ' 

He left me — now my second lord is treacherous as the first. 
475 * Henceforth let woman ne'er trust man,' again I will 
exclaim ; 

The name of my deceiver 's changed — my story is the same. 

Oh! would I had fulfill'd the fate that threaten'd me 
before ! 

My bitter tears had all been wept, and I had been no more. 



ILL USTRA TIVE NOTES. 259 

Why didst thou save me ? Bacchus ! why ? on yon bleak 
desert cast, 
480 I could have drain'd my cup at once, and all had now been 
past. 

" Oh ! more unstable than the leaves that round thy 

temples twine, 
Unstable Bacchus ! thou hast known what anguish once 

was mine, 
And hast thou dared to bring a foreign quean to pain my 

sight, 
And rob our bridal bower of bliss, our chamber of de. 

light ? 
485 Alas! where is thy troth? and where the oaths thou once 

didst swear ? 
Ah, me ! how often shall I breathe those words of drear 

despair ? 
Theseus thou blam'dst, thou call'dst him base, a maiden to 

undo ; 
Be judge thyself, thou 'It say thou art the baser of the two. 

"Silence brood o'er my wrong! let silent griefs my soul 
consume, 
490 Lest haply I, so oft deceived, seem worthy of my doom. 
But least of all let Theseus know — thou surely never wilt — 
He would rejoice that thou hadst been partaker of his 
guilt. 

" Forsooth, a girl of fairer hue supplants thy swarthy queen, 
Then be it so, and in my foe be that hue ever seen. 
495 What matters it? that fault with thee's the rarest of her 

charms ; 
W T hat art thou doing ? thou but clasp'st pollution in thine 

arms. 
Bacchus ! fulfil thy pledge — prefer no other's love to mine, 
For all that wife could ever give, all, husband, has been 

thine. 



260 EXCURSUS AND 

" The horns of a too beauteous bull once won my mother's 

heart, 
500 Thine, Ariadne's : mine the sad, but hers the shameless 

part. 
Let not my love turn to my hurt, for it hath hurt not thee 
That thou confessedst all the flame thy bosom felt for me ; 
Nor think it strange thou burn'dst me — thou, 'tis said, in 

fire wast born, 
And by thy father's hand from its devouring fury torn. 
505 And am I she whom thou of yore didst vow to dower with 

heaven ? 
Ah me ! what was thy promise then ! and what return 

thou'st given ! " 

She finished. Long her woeful plaint fell on her husband's 
ear, 

For haply he had follow' d close on Ariadne's rear ; 

He clasps her in one long embrace, kisses her tears away, 
510 And says, " Let us together seek the realms of endless day; 

My wife before — now from my name united name thou 'It 
draw, 

Be Ariadne now no more, but henceforth Libera ; 

And of thy godhead let thy crown a sure memorial be — 

The crown which Vulcan Venus gave, which Venus gave 
to thee." 
515 His word's fulfill' d ; its nine bright gems to nine bright 
stars he turns, 

And 'mong the stellar hosts her crown with radiant splen- 
dour burns. 



Metamm. vhi. 174-182. 

Then Theseus off to Dia's isle fair Ariadne bore, 

And, cruel, left her there to roam the bleak and barren shore ; 

But when Iacchus saw the maid forlorn and sore distrest, 

He brought her sweet deliverance, and clasp 'd her to his breast, 

And that to her a fadeless wreath of glory "might be given, 

He took the crown from off her brow and bore it up to heaven ; 



ILL USTRA TIVE NO TES. 26 1 

Through unsubstantial fields of air it soar'd, and, soaring, burn'd 
Till all its splendour-darting gems to lustrous stars were turn'd, 
Then, 'tween the Serpent-holder and the Toiler-kneeling-down, 
He hung it, still retaining all the semblance of a crown. 



Carm. LXIV. v. 6, 7. 

Ausi palmis. 

Cf. Tibull. i. 3, 35-38- 

Quam bene Saturno vivebant rege prius quam 

Tellus in longas est patefacta vias ! 
Nondum caeruleas pinus contempserat undas, 

Effusum ventis praebueratque sinum. 

How blest men lived when good old Saturn reign'd, 
Ere roads had intersected hill and dale, 

No pine had yet the azure wave disdain'd, 
Or spread its swelling canvas to the gale. 

V. 8, 9. Diva currum. 

Cf. Aesch. Prom. Vinct. 467, 468 — 

OaXaaaoirXayKTa 5' ovtls aWos dvr efiov 
Aivoirrep rjvpe volvtlKiov ox^ara. 

And Shelley, Prom. Unbound, act ii. scene 4 — 

He taught to rule, as life directs the limbs, 
The. tempest- winged chariots of the ocean, 
And the Celt knew the Indian. 

V. 15. Aequoreae monstrum Nereides admirantes. 

Cf. the picture of Boreas scouring the sea from the Cynegetica 
of Nemesianus, a Carthaginian poet (fl. 283 A.D.) v. 272-278 — 

Haud secus effusis Nerei per caerula ventis, 
Quum se Threicius Boreas super extulit antro, 
Stridentique sono vastas exterruit undas, 
Omnia turbato cesserunt flamina ponto ; 






262 EXCURSUS AND 

Ipse super fluctus spumanti murmure fervens, 
Conspicuum pelago caput eminet; omnis euntem 
Nereidiim mirala suo super aequore turba. 

As, when the unbridled winds o'er ocean rave, 
Wild Boreas rushes from his Thracian cave, 
And shrilly-roaring ploughs the immeasured plain, 
Scaring his brothers from the writhing main 
'Mid seething murmurs and with frantic glee, 
He rears his head above the angry sea, 
And onward sweeps, the liquid realms along, 
Beheld with wonder by the Nereid throng. 

V. 30. 

Oceanusque, mari totum qui amplectitur orbem. 

Cf. Aesch. Prom. Vinct. 137-140 — 

Tijs tto\vt€kvov TtjOvos eKyova 
ToO 7r€pl wdcrdp 0' eWicraofxevov 
X06j>' aKoifitfTtp peti/mart iraldes 
Uarpbs 'tiKeavov. 

V. 31, seqq. 
Cf. Statii Theb. ii. 213-216— 

. Diffuderat Argos 
Expectata dies : laeto regalia coetu 
Atria complentur, species est cernere avorum 
Cominus, et vivis certantia vultibus aera. 

O'er Argos rose the day expected long, 
And joyous crowds the regal palace throng, 
Whose spacious halls ancestral figures grace, 
The brazen vying with the living face. 

V. 38, seqq. 

Cf. Tibull. ii. 1, 5-8— 

Luce sacra requiescat humus, requiescat arator, 

Et grave suspenso vomere cesset opus. 
Solvite vincla jugis : nunc ad praesepia debent 
Plena coronato stare boves capite. 






ILLUSTRATIVE NOTES. 263 

Let soil and tiller keep this feast alway, 

Suspend the share ; be no hard labour here ; 

Unchain the yokes ; at well-fill' d stalls to-day 

'Tis meet with garlands ye should crown the steer. 

V. 48, 49. 
Cf. Hor. Sat. ii. 6, 102 — 

In locuplete domo vestigia ; rubro ubi cocco 
Tincta super lectos canderet vestis eburnos. 

V. 52. 

Namque fluentisono prospectans littore Diae. 

Dia, one of the Cyclades, afterwards called Naxos. 

Theocritus thus alludes to the desertion of Ariadne by The- 
seus. Idyll, ii. 43-46 — 

'Es rpls airoGTrevho) /cat rpls rdde irbrvia cpuvQ' 
Eire 7iwa ttjv(x3 7ra/?a/ce/cAtrat etre /cat avrjp, 
Tbaaov e-x ot X&das, oaaov ttoko. Orjaea cpavri 
'Ez> Ata XacrdijfjLev evirXoKdjULU 'AptdSras. 

Dread queen, I thrice libation pay and thrice these words de- 
clare, 

Or man or woman hath his heart entrapp'd in silken snare, 

The oblivion seize him which they say from Theseus' breast ere- 
while 

Swept fair -hair' d Ariadne left on Dia's lonely isle. 

V. 90. 

Aurave distinctos educit verna colores. 

Cf. Burns — 

Her looks were like a flower in May, 
Her smile was like a summer morn. 

V. 96. 

Quaeque regis Golgos, quaeque Idalium frondosum. 

Cf. Theoc. Idyll, xv. 100— 

Aeairoiv', & ToXyus re /cat 'IddXiov icplXrjaas. 



264 EXCURSUS AND 

V. 98. 

in flavo saepe hospite suspirantem ! 

Cf. Ovid. Fast. i. 417— 

Hanc cupit, hanc optat, sola suspirat in ilia. 

V. 105-109. 

N am frangens. 

Cf. Virg. Aeneid. ii. 626-631 — 

Ac veluti summis antiquam in montibus ornum 
Quum ferro accisam crebrisque bipennibus instant 
Eruere agricolae certatim ; ilia usque minatur, 
Et tremefacta comam concusso vertice nutat, 
Vulneribus donee paulatim evicta supremum 
Congemuit, traxitque jugis avulsa ruinam. 

As when on mountain top the aged ash, 
Lopp'd by the steel and axe's frequent stroke, 
Begins to totter 'neath repeated blows, 
Then nods with threatening mien its palsied head 
And shakes its quivering locks, till by degrees 
With many wounds o'ercome it groans its last, 
And, wrench' d away, drags ruin o'er the ridge. 

Cf. also Hor. Od. iv. 6, 9-1 1 — 

mordaci velut icta ferro 

Pinus, aut impulsa cupressus Euro 
Procidit late. 
V. in. 

Nequidquam vanis jactantem cornua ventis. 
Evidently taken from a Greek poet quoted by Cicero. Epist. 
ad Atticum, viii. 5 — 

pixj/ai 

IloXXd fJLarrjv Kepdeacriv £s rjepa ^vfxrjvavTa. 

V. 132, seqq. 
Tibullus alludes to the complaint of Ariadne, iii. 6, 39-42 — 
Gnosia, Theseae quondam perjuria linguae 
Flevisti ignoto sola relicta mari : 






ILL USTRA TIVE NO TES. 265 

Sic cecinit pre? te doctus, Minoi, Catullus 
Ingrati referens impia facta viri. 

Fair Gnosian, erst the lies of Theseus' tongue 

Thou mourn'dst, left lone beside an unknown sea, 

In thy behalf thus skill'd Catullus sung, 
And told the ingrate's fell impiety. 

V. 140, 141. 

mihi non hoc miserae sperare jubebas : 

Sed connubia laeta, sed optatos hymenaeos : 

Cf. Claudian Rapt. Proserp. lib. iii. — 

Non tales gestare tibi, Proserpina, taedas 
Sperabam ; sed vota mihi communia matrum, 
Et thalami festaeque faces, coeloque canendus 
Ante oculos Hymenaeus erat : sic numina fatis 
Volvimur, et nullo Lachesis discrimine saevit ? 

My daughter, torch like this for thee I never hoped to bear, 
And yet my wish was but the wish of mothers everywhere, 
A happy bridal for my child, glad flambeaux flaming high, 
A joyous hymenaeal sung beneath the open sky, 
Thus 'mong the gods shall Lachesis without distinction rave, 
And the dread name of deity be impotent to save ? 

V. 141. 1 
Virgil has imitated' this line, Aeneid. iv. 3 1 6 — 

Per connubia nostra, per inceptos hymenaeos. 

V. 142. 

Quae cuncta aerii discerpunt irrita venti. 
Cf. Virg. Aeneid. ix. 312^313 — 

sed aurae 

Omnia discerpunt et nubibus irrita donant 

V. 154, seqq. Quaenam te genuit, &c. 

Cf. Tibull. iii. 4, 83-96— 

Nee tibi crediderim votis contraria vota 
Nee tantum crimen pectore inesse tuo : 



266 EXCURSUS AND 

Nam te nee vasti genuerunt aequora ponti, 

Nee flammam volvens ore Chimaera fero, 
Nee canis anguinea redimitus terga caterva, 

Cui tres sunt linguae, tergeminumque caput, 
Scyllaque virgineam canibus succincta figuram, 

Nee te conceptam saeva leaena tulit, 
Barbara nee Scythiae tellus horrendave Syrtis, 

Sed culta et duris non habitanda domus. 
Et longe ante alias omnes mitissima mater 

Isque pater quo non alter amabilior. 
Haec deus in melius crudelia somnia vertat 

Et jubeat tepidos irrita ferre Notos. 

Oh, I could ne'er believe thy vows were contrary to mine, 
Or that so fell a thought could dwell within that heart of thine, 
For roaring sea ne'er gender'd thee, nor from her jaws of fire 
Did dread Chimaera belch thee forth — the offspring of her ire, 
Nor wild hell-hound enwreath'd around with wriggling snakes 

thee bred, 
Grim monster of the triple tongue and triple-formed head, 
Nor yet did maiden Scylla's dog-encinctured form thee bear, 
Nor savage lioness conceive and whelp thee in her lair, 
Nor was the barbarous Scythian land thy home or Syrtis fell, 
But a benignant hearth where cruel beings could not dwell ; 
A mild fond mother, too, was thine, yea mild beyond compare, 
No kindlier father ever nursed his child with kindlier care. 
Then, gracious Heaven, conduct my cruel dreams to issues 

bright, 
And bid warm Notus sweep these dark forebodings from my 

sight. 

V. 171, 172. 

Jupiter omnipotens, utinam ne tempore primo 
Gnosia Cecropiae tetigissent littora puppes. 

Cf. Virg. Aeneid. iv. 657, 658— 

Felix, lieu nimium felix, si littora tantum 
Nunquam Dardaniae tetigissent nostra carinae ! 



ILL US TRA TIVE NO TES. 2 67 

Happy, alas ! too happy had we been 

If never Trojan keel had touch'd our strand ! 

V. 177. Nam quo me referam ? 

Cf. Eurip. Med. 502, 503, &c— 

NOv irol TpaTcofjicu ; irorepa irpos irarpos do/iovs, 
Ods vol irpodovaa kcll irdrpav acpLKo/jLTjv ; k.t. A. 

Where shall I turn me ? To my father's halls ? 
I, who betray'd my home and fatherland 
And came with thee ? &c. 

V. 192-194. Ouare iras. 



Cf. Senec. Med. act i. v. 13, 14 — 

Adeste, adeste ! Sceleris ultrices deae, 
Crinem solutis squalidae serpentibus. 

V. 205, 206. 

Quo tunc et tellus atque horrida contremuerunt 
Aequora, concussitque micantia sidera mundus. 

Cf. Hor. Od. i. 34, 9-12 — 

Quo bruta tellus, et vaga flumina, 
Quo Styx et invisi horrida Taenari 
Sedes, Atlanteusque finis 
Concutitur. 

Whereat the inert earth with terror quakes, 
Tremble the streams and rolling Stygian river, 

The rocky cliff of hated Taenarus shakes, 
And all the peaks of mighty Atlas quiver. 

V. 247-249. Sic recepit. 

Cf. Stat. Silv. iii. 3, 179, 180— 

Haud aliter gemuit perjuria Theseus, • 

Littore quo falsis deceperat Aegea velis. 



268 EXCURSUS AND 

V. 260. 

Pars obscura cavis celebrabant orgia cistis. 
Cf. Theocr. Idyll, xxvi. 7-9 — 

'Ie/xz 5'e/c /aVras ireirovaiitva x e P<?w eXo?cai 
TOiiKpd/JLOJS KareSevro veodpeirTOJV kiri (3(ojJLu)i> f 
Qs edidaax, &s avrbs idvfxdpei Alovvcos. 

V. 270, seqq. 
Cf. Shelley, Queen Mab, viii. 23, 24 — 

Like the vagne sighings of the wind at even 
That wakes the wavelets of the slumbering sea. 

V. 274. 

leni resonant plangore cachinni. • 
Cf. Aesch. Prom. Vinct. 89, 90 — 



irovTiuv re Kv/xarojp 

'ApTjpLdfiov ytXacr/jLa. 
Milton — 

Cheer' d with the grateful smell, old ocean smiles. 

And Byron, " Giaour'' — 

There mildly dimpling, ocean's cheek 
Reflects the tints of many a peak, 
Caught by the laughing tides that lave 
Those Edens of the eastern wave. 

See also the beautiful lines of Martial, descriptive of the sea 
in a state of active repose. Epigr. x. 11-15 — 

Hie summa leni stringitur Thetis vento ; 
Nee languet aequor ; viva sed quies Ponti 
Pictam phaselon adjuvante fert aura ; 
Sicut puellae non amantis aestatem 
Mota salubre purpura venit frigus. 

Soft as from waving fan of lady fair 
Comes the cool breath that soothes the sultry air, 
So here the light wind plays on Thetis' breast, 
Who lies all still, yet not by languors prest ; 






ILL USTRA TIVE NO TES. 269 

Her living rest, and the light favouring breeze 
The painted pinnace carry o'er the seas. 

V. 278. 

Ad se quisque vago passim pede discedebant. 
Cf. Horn. II. i. 606— 

Oi fJL€I> KaKK€LOVT€S £$(XV oXkQV§€ eKCLCTTOS. 

V. 297, 298. 

Quam quondam silici restrictus membra catena 
Persolvit, pendens e verticibus praeruptis. 

Ci Aesch. Prom. Vinct. 4-6 — 

Tovhe TTpbs Terpens 

'T\//r]\oKp7)fivoLS tov Xecopybv oxp-dcrai 
'AdajuLavTiviov deajJLQv tv dpprjKTOLS iredcus. 

V. 306, 307. 

The Parcae, who dwelt in the clefts of Parnassus (Horn. Hymn 
in Mercur. 555), and in the vicinity of Thessaly, are most fitly 
chosen by Catullus to sing the nuptial song. They sang the 
hymenaeus in honour of the nuptials of Jupiter and Juno, as 
we learn from the "Birds" of Aristophanes, v. 1731, seqq. — 

Back, divide, retire aside, 

Away, 'tis now your duty 
Round the happy man to veer, 
Happy fortune's happiest peer, 
Oh what loveliness is here, 

And oh, what matchless beauty. 

Hail, blest bridegroom, who hast brought 

Great joy to this our city, 
Great good luck by thee, I ween, 
Shower' d upon the birds has been ; 
Up, receive him and his queen 

With bridal song and ditty. 



2JO EXCURSUS AND 

Once upon a time the Fates 

With all the gods together 
Did the lofty-throned king 
To Olympian Juno bring, 
And this hymenaeal sing, 

"Haste, Hymen, Hymen, hither." 

Eros of the golden wing, 

And bloom no blast can wither, 

Seized the back-stretch'd reins and drove, 

Groomsman at the feast of love, 

When blest Juno pair'd with Jove,„ 
" Haste, Hymen, tlymen, hither." 

V. 33*,332. 

Quae tibi flexanimo mentem perfundat amore, 
Languidulosque paret tecum conjungere somnos. 

Cf. Theoc. Idyll, xviii. 55, 56 — 

Ei/5er' is aWdXwv crepvov (piXorara wveomes 
Kcu irbdov. 

Now sleep, and breathe into each other's breasts the fire 
Of warm marital love and ever-fond desire. 

V. 350-3^2. Saepe palmis. 

Cf. Senec. Here. Oet. 1668-1673— 

Ingemuit omnis turba, nee lacrimas dolor 
Cuiquam remisit. Mater in luctum furens 
Diduxit avidum pectus, atque utero tenus 
Exerta vastos ubera in planctus ferit ; 
Superosque et ipsum vocibus pulsans Jovem 
Implevit omnem voce feminea locum. 

Wail'd all the crowd ; no tearless eye was there ; 
Then, wild with woe and frantic with despair, 
His sorrowing mother bared her eager breast, 
And smote with mighty blows her heaving chest, 
While, blaming Jove and all the powers on high, 
With wailings wild she filPd the earth and sky. 



ILLUSTRATIVE NOTES. 27 1 

V. 398 to the end. 

Sed claro. 

Cf. Ovid. Metamm. i. 144-150 — 

non hospes ab hospite tutus, 

Non socer a genero ; fratrum quoque gratia rara est. 
Imminet exitio vir conjugis, ilia mariti : 
Lurida terribiles miscent aconita novercae : 
Filius ante diem patrios inquirit in annos. 
Victa jacet pietas, et virgo caede madentes, 
Ultima Caelestum, terras Astraea reliquit. 

No guest of hospitable roof is sure ; 
No more is sire from son-in-law secure ; 
Even brothers' love has all or well-nigh fled ; 
The wife and husband wish each other dead ; 
Dire step-dames mix the lurid aconite ; 
The son abhors his very father's sight, 
And pries into his years with anxious care ; 
Affection prostrate lies. 

Then Justice fair, 
The last lone lingerer of heavenly birth, 
Aghast with horror, fled the blood-soak'd earth. 



POEM LXV. 

Catullus had promised to translate for his friend Hor- 
talus (Quintus Hortensius) the " Hair of Beronice," from 
Callimachus, a task which the death of his brother pre- 
vented him for a time from accomplishing. Afraid lest 
Hortalus should assign a false reason for the delay, or 
deem him guilty of forgetfulness, he lays bare his heart 
to his friend, and tells him his affliction with an open- 
ness of which only generous natures are capable. 






272 EXCURSUS AND 

In regard to the simile with which the poem con- 
cludes, the translator, while acknowledging its beauty, is 
compelled to side with those who fail to see its apposite- 
ness. He is inclined to think with Rossbach that it is 
either a fragment of a translation from Callimachus, or, at 
all events, a fragment of another poem. As the lines, how- 
ever, are printed in almost every edition as the conclusion 
of the piece, he has given them the only rendering of 
which, considered as belonging to the poem, they seemed 
susceptible. 



Carm. LXV. v. i. 

Etsi me assiduo confectum cura dolore. 

Cf. the opening lines of the Ciris — 

Etsi me vario jactatum laudis amore 
Irritaque expertum fallacis praemia volgi. 

V. 13, 14. 

Qualia sub densis ramorum concinit umbris 
Daulias, absumti fata gemens Ityli. 

Cf. Ovid. Heroid. xv. 153-156— 

Sola virum non ulta pie maestissima mater 

Concinit Tsmarium Daulias ales Ityn. 
Ales Ityn, Sappho desertos cantat amores 
Hactenus, ut media caetera nocte silent. 

Dire vengeance his lone mother brings 

Upon her lord in mortal hate, 
And now, a Daulian bird, she sings 

And mourns Ismarian Itys' fate. 
A bird o'er Itys lost complains, 

And love-lorn Sappho sadly pours 
O'er slighted loves her rueful strains, 

When all is still at midnight hours. 



ILL USTRA TIVE NO TES. 273 

V. 19, 20. 

Ut missum sponsi furtivo munere malum 
Procurrit casto virglnis e gremio. 

Cf. Propert. i. 3, 21-33— 

Et modo solveba.m nostra de fronte corollas 

Ponebamque tuis, Cynthia, temporibus, 
Et modo gaudebam lapsos formare capillos, 

Nunc furtiva cavis poma dabam manibus, 
Omniaque ingrato largibar munera somno, 

Munera de prono saepe voluta sinu ; 
Et quotiens raro duxti suspiria motu, 

Obstupui vano credulus auspicio, 
Ne qua tibi insolitos portarent visa timores, 

Neve quis invitam cogeret esse suam : 
Donee diversas percurrens luna fenestras, 

Luna moraturis sedula luminibus, 
Compositos levibus radiis patefecit ocellos. 

And now I loosed the garland from my brow, 
And round thy temples did a chaplet twine, 

Anon thy truant locks confined, and now 
My hand the furtive apple slipp'd in thine. 

Ungrateful sleep with all my gifts I dower'd, 

Gifts that too oft have roll'd from forth thy breast, 

And when thou stirr'dst or heav'dst a sigh, o'erpower'd 
I silent stood by bodings vain opprest, 

Lest grim unwonted fears disturb'd thy dreams, 
Or eager swain, with thee unwilling, coped, 

Then mild-ray' d Luna with officious beams 

Stream'd through the lattice, and thine eyelids oped. 



274 EXCURSUS AND 



Poem LXVI. 

Beronice's Hair. 

This poem is translated from the Greek of Callimachus 
— the poet whom, after Sappho, Catullus most delighted 
to reproduce. The following are the circumstances 
which induced the Greek poet to write this complimen- 
tary elegiac poem. 

Ptolemy Philadelphus, son of Ptolemy Soter {the Pre- 
server), had caused a temple to be erected to his wife, 
Arsinoe, to whom he wished that divine honours should 
be paid. His son, Ptolemy Euergetes {the Be)ief actor), 
married his cousin-german, Beronice, daughter of Magas, 
king of Cyrene. In virtue of this relationship by blood, 
Beronice, in the poem, is styled, according to ancient 
usage, the sister of Ptolemy, (v. 17.) Very shortly after 
their union, the youthful husband was summoned from 
her side to fight the Assyrian. Beronice, in an agony of 
despair at the double loss of husband and brother, vows 
to devote a lock of her hair to the Gods if her husband 
should prove victorious and soon return to her arms in 
triumph. He returns, and the ruthless steel dissevers 
the lock from the head of the youthful queen. It is laid 
on the shrine of Arsinoe, and shortly after disappears. 
Light-winged Zephyr, brother of Memnon (Unigena. v. 
53) and son of Aurora (Hes. Theog. v. 378), is commis- 
sioned by Venus to hasten to the temple and bear to 
heaven this tribute of conjugal devotion. He takes it 
up, and deposits it on the bosom of the Queen of Love, 
by whose command it is placed in the sky — 

" A new-made star amid the primal spheres." 

But the lock cannot forget the radiant brow of Beronice, 






ILL USTRA Tl VE NO TES. 



or the golden curls among which it used to play. It im- 
plores young brides to propitiate heaven in its behalf 
with offerings of perfumes, and declares that it would 
rather again adorn the brow of Beronice, than remain 
among the splendid throng, though chaos should ensue 
and all the stars be hurled from their places. 

Such is a brief outline of the poem. The explanation of 
the mysterious disappearance of the lock, and its sub- 
sequent apotheosis, were invented by the shrewd and in- 
genious court-astronomer, Conon, to console the afflicted 
Beronice. Callimachus saw the value of the philoso- 
pher's pretended discovery, and embalmed it in the beauti- 
fully extravagant lines of which only an echo remains to us 
in the translation by Catullus. The heroism, tenderness, 
and devotion of Beronice are so well portrayed by the 
sorrowing lock that the poet, even without anything else 
to recommend him, must, by this work, have secured the 
favour and gratitude of the Egyptian queen. 

Although we have every reason to believe that the 
translation was admirably executed by Catullus, the loss 
of the original is much to be regretted. No work of 
Catullus has suffered more from the inaccuracies and 
carelessness of transcribers, and the unhappy conjectural 
emendations of commentators, than this one ; and the 
original would not only have afforded the means of re- 
storing it to a certain extent, but would have exhibited 
to us, in a clearer light than we can ever possess, the 
extraordinary ability of Catullus in rendering the pro- 
ductions of the Greek poets. That he possessed this 
power in no ordinary degree will be at once apparent 
to any one who will take the trouble of comparing the 
structure of the elegiac poems of Catullus with that of 
the Greek elegies. The simplicity (dcpeXeta^ or Greek 
abandon, so to speak, of the Catullian distich is most 
marked when it is viewed side bv side with the more 



276 EXCURSUS A ND 

exact and laboured productions of Ovid, Tibullus, and 
Propertius, — a characteristic not confined to his longer 
poems, but pervading all his epigrams. 

Carm. LXVI. v. 1-6. 

Omnia aerio. 

Cf. Aesch. Prom. Vinct. 457, 458— 

■ es re §77 <j<fiiv avroXas iyw 

"Acrrpui> Zdet^a rds re dvaKpirovs dvaeis. 

And Shelley, Prom. Unbound, Act ii., Scene 4 — 
He taught the implicated orbits woven 
Of the wide-wandering stars ; and how the sun 
Changes his lair, and by what secret spell 
The pale moon is transform'd, when her broad eye 
Gazes not on the inter-lunar sea. 

V. 13. 

Dulcia nocturnae porjans vestigia rixae. 

Cf. Claudian. in Fescenn. Epith. Hon. et Mar — 
Nocturni referens vulnera proelii. 

V. 48-50. Jupiter duritiem ! 

Cf. Aesch. Prom. Vinct. 500-503 — 

evepOe de x^opos 

KeKpvfjL/uiev av0p<x>iroi<jiv dxpekrj/uLCLTC, 
Xa\Kov, aldrjpov, apyvpov, xpwov re tIs 
^Tjveiev av irdpoidev e^evpelv ipLov ; 

Cf. also v. 714, 715— 

Acuas de x €l P° s 0L cr^poreKroves 
OIkovgl ~Kd\v(3es, ov$ (pvXd^aadai ere XPV- 

V. 91. 

Unguinis expertem non siris -esse tuam me. 

This is the reading given in the latest German editions, e.g. thote 
of Rossbach, Schwabe, &c. Mr Ellis, in his edition of Catullus 



ILLUSTRATIVE NOTES. 277 

lately published, has retained the MS. reading sanguinis, which 
gains considerable support from the following passage in the 
"History" of Tacitus, (ii. 3): — " Sanguine m arae obfundere 
vetitum : precibus et igne puro altaria adolentur." The follow- 
ing is submitted as a rendering of the passage (v. 89 to the end), 
according to the text of Mr Ellis : — 

And when, O queen, thou to the stars shalt turn, 
And festal torches to Love's goddess burn, 
Forget me not before her bloodless shrine, 
For I, though here, am still as surely thine. 
Rush, stars, to ruin in your shady sky, 
Might I again amid her tresses lie ! 
Let me but grace again thy brow divine, 
Orion then may next Aquarius shine. 



Poems LXVIII. a and LXVIII. b 

I have followed Froelich and Rossbach in dividing this 
poem, — the first (v. 1-40) being addressed to Manlius ; 
the second (v. 41-160) to Allius. The grounds for ad- 
dressing the second to Allius are very questionable ; * 
but there can be no doubt that the one poem has no 
relation to the other, and for the following reasons : — 

1st. It is evident that Manlius had requested Catullus 
to send him some books, and to write him a poem, to 
console him in his hours of affliction (v. 9, 10), both 
of which he is compelled, however unwillingly, to deny 
him (v. 31, 32) ; the books, because he is living at Verona 
and has only a small case [capsuld) with him ; the poem, 
because his brother's death weighs too heavy on his 
mind to admit of his devoting himself to such a task. 

* I have a strong impression that Coelius, not Allius, is the person to 
whom this poem is addressed. Cf. v. 51-56 with Carm. c. v. 5-7. 



278 EXCURSUS AND 



After these statements, it is impossible to conceive that 
Catullus, 07i the spot, wrote to him a long poem. 
2d. The second poem contradicts the first — 
v. 1-8, and 155, 156 ; 
v. 25, 26, and 159, 160. 
3d. Catullus would be made to repeat himself, which 
he does nowhere else in the same poem — 
v. 20-24, an d 92-96. 
\t1i. One poem clearly ends at line 40, while another 
as clearly begins at line 41. 

Carm. LXVIII. a v. 13. 

queis merser fortunae fluctibus ipse. 

Cf. Aesch. Prom. Vinct. v. 746 — 

Avax €L f l€ P< )i/ 7 e WXcryos arrjpas dvrjs. 
V. 29. Frigida deserto tepefecit membra cubili- 
Cf. Tibull. i. 8, 27-30— 

Xec tu difficilis puero tarn en esse memento, 

Persequitur poenis tristia facta Venus, 
Munera nee poscas : det munera canus amator, 
Ut foveas molli frigida membra sinu. 

Then be not to thy swain unkind and sour, 

For Venus vengeance takes on shameful slights, 

Nor sue for gifts — the hoary lover's dower — 
To make thee thaw his frozen limbs o' nights. 

Carm. LXVIII. b v. 49-50. 

Nee tenuem texens sublimis aranea telam, 
In deserto, Alii, nomine opus faciat. 

Cf. Propert. iv. 5, 31-34 (iii. 6, 31-34)— 

Si non vana canunt mea somnia, Lygdame, testor, 
Poena erit ante meos sera, sed ampla, pedes; 

Putris et in vacuo texetur aranea lecto : 
Noctibus illorum dormiet ipsa Venus. 



ILL US TEA TIVE NO TES. 279 

If but my dreams bode truth, then vengeance dread, 
Though late, shall at my feet be amply paid, 

The flimsy cobweb line their vacant bed, 

And love sleep all night long though fondly pray'd. 

V. S3- 

Cum tantum arderem, quantum Trinacria rupes. 

Cf. Byron — 

But mine was like the lava flood 

That boils in Aetna's breast of flame! 

And Ovid, Rem. Amor. 491-494 — 

Quamvis infelix media torreberis Aetna, 

Frigidior glacie fac videare tuae : 
Et sanum simula, ne, siquid forte dolebis, 
Sentiat, et ride, cum tibi flendus eris. 

Though Aetna's flames should scorch thy love-sick heart, 

The semblance of an icy coldness keep ; 
Seem heart-whole, lest she know thy bosom's smart, 

And smile although thou feel'st inclined to weep. 

V. 62. 

Cum gravis exustos aestus hiulcat agros. 
Cf. Tibull. i. 7, 17, 21, 22— 

Quid referam 

Qualis et, arentes cum findit Sirius agros, 
Fertilis aestiva Nilus abundet aqua ? 



Why tell 

How fertile Nile with summer floods abounds 

When scorching Sirius cracks the heat-baked grounds? 

V. 70, 71. 

Quo mea se molli Candida Diva pede 
Intulit. 

Cf. Propert. iii. 3, 21-24, (ii. 12, 21-24) — 

Quam si perdideris, quis erit qui talia cantet ? 
(Haec mea Musa levis gloria magna tua est, ) 



280 EXCURSUS AND 

Qui caput et digitos et lumina nigra puellae 
Et canat ut soleant molliter ire pedes ? 

Quench it (umbra mea), from whom will then such songs 



arise 



(My Muse, though lowly, is thy glory great), 
Who then will sing thy head and jet-black eyes, 
Thy lovely fingers, and thy mincing gait ? 

V. 71, 72. 

et trito fulgentem in limine plantam 

Innixa, arguta constitit in solea. 

Cf. Propert iii. 27, 39-42, (ii. 29, 39-42)— 

Dixit, et opposita propellens savia dextra 
Prosilit in laxa nixa pedem solea. 

Sic ego tarn sancti custode recludor amoris : 
Ex illo felix nox mihi nulla fuit. 

She spoke : with her right hand my kiss opposed, 
Then in loose sandal darted from my sight. 

Thus piying care love's hallow'd temple closed : 
Since then I have not known one happy night. 

V. 83. 

Noctibus in longis avidum saturasset amorem. 

Cf. Ovid. Heroid. xiii. 103-106, (Laodamia scribit) — 

Sive latet Phoebus, seu terris altior exstat, 
Tu mihi luce dolor, tu mihi nocte venis : 

Nocte tamen quam luce magis ; nox grata puellis, 
Quarum suppositus colla lacertus habet. 

Then whether reigns the day or reigns the night, 

Thou art my thought by night, my thought by day- 
Night more than day— night is the girl's delight, 
Who on a lover's arm her neck can lay. 



ILL USTRA TIVE NOTES. 28 1 

V. 109-116. Quale foret. 

Cf. Tibull. iii. 4, 65-68— 

Saevus Amor docuit validos tentare labores, 
Saevus Amor docuit verbera saeva pati. 

Me quondam Admeti niveas pavisse juvencas 
Non est in vanum fabula ficta jocum. 

His votaries Love hath taught by stern behest 
Hard toils to bear, beneath the lash to bleed, 

'Tis no vain fable framed for idle jest 

That I Admetus' snow-white flocks did feed, 

V. 115, 116. 

Pluribus ut coeli tereretur janua Divis 
Hebe nee longa virginitate foret. 

Cf. Horn. Odyss. xi. 602, 603 — 

avrbs de fier adavdroun 6eo?<riv 

Tepirercu ev daXLqs /ecu e'xet KaWLacfrvpov "~H.pr)v. 

He banquets now the immortal gods beside, 
With beauteous-ankled Hebe for his bride. 

V. 125-128. Nee mulier. 

Cf. Propert. iii. 7, 27-30, (ii. 15, 27-30)— 

Exemplo junctae tibi sint in amore columbae, 
Masculus et totum femina conjugium. 

Errat, qui finem vesani quaerit amoris : 
Verus amor nullum novit habere modum. 

The faithful doves be pattern of our joy, 
That each with each in fond affection vie ; 
. He errs who would love's frenzied flame destroy ; 
True love can never know satiety. 

Mart. xi. 104, 9 — 

Basia me capiunt blandas imitata columbas. 



282 EXCURSUS AND 

And again, Epigr. xii. 65, 7-9 — 

Amplexa collum, basioque tarn longo 
Blandita, quam sunt nuptiae columbarum, 
Rogare coepit Phyllis amphoram vini. 

She clasps my neck, her lips to mine she presses, 
Long as when mating dove fond dove caresses, 
" What asks my Phyllis, Phyllis the divine ? " 
" Nothing, love, nothing but a jar of wine.' 1 

v. 133, 134. 

Cupido 

Fulgebat crocina candidus in tunica. 

So Quintus Calaber v. 71. 

~Kvirpis €V(TT^(pavos, rrjv d't/iepos dficpeTroraro. 

V. 145, 146. 

Sed furtiva dedit mira munuscula nocte, 
Ipsius ex ipso demta viri gremio. 

Cf. Burns — 

O May, thy morn was ne'er sae sweet, 

As the mirk night o' December ; 
For sparkling was the rosy wine, 

And private was the chamber, 
And dear was she I darena name, 

But I will aye remember. 

V. 147, 148. 

Quare illud satis est, si nobis is datur unus, 
Quern lapide ilia diem candidiore notat. 

Cf. Catull. cvii. 6, and Mart. Epigr. xii. 34 — 

Triginta mihi quatuorque messes 
Tecum, si memini, fuere, Juli : 
Quarum dulcia mixta sunt amaris ; 
Sed jucunda tarn en fuere plura. 



ILL USTRA TIVE NO TES. 283 

Et si calculus omnis hue et illuc 
Diver sus bicolorque digeratur : 
Viiicet caudida turba nigriorem. 
Si vitare velis acerba quaedam, 
Et tristes animi cavere morsus, 
Nulli te facias nimis sodalem. 
Gaudebis minus, et minus dolebis. 

Julius we Ve now together spent 

Some four and thirty years ; 
We 've found life's sweets with bitters blent, 

But aye more smiles than tears. 

Could we life's diverse stones now view, 

Strrcvn twin-kued here and there, 
And part them : those of darker hue 

Would not outsum the fair. 

If thou some bitter things wouldst shun 

In life's uneven coujse, 
And have thy days more smoothly run, 

Ungall'd by fell remorse ; 

Though many friends should round thee press, 

Take none too close to thee, 
And if thy joys should be the less, 

Less, too, thy griefs will be. 



V. 155. 



Sitis felices et tu simul et tua vita. 



A common formula, vide Tibull. iii. 6, 27-30 — 

Quid precor ah demens ? venti temeraria vota, 

Aeriae et nubes diripienda ferant. 
Quamvis nulla mei superest tibi cura, Neaera, 

Sis felix, et sint Candida fata tua. 

No — let my rash and frantic wishes be 

Dispersed by winds and clouds athwart the air : 

Xeaera, though thou ne'er shouldst think of me, 
Mayst thou be blest, and may thy fate be fair. 



284 EXCURSUS AND 



POEM LXIX. 

V. i. Noli admirari, quare tibi femina nulla, 
Rufe, velit tenerum supposnisse fe?nur. 

Cf. TibulL i. 8, 23-26— 

Quid queror heu misero carmen nocuisse, quid herbas ? 

Forma nihil magicis utitur auxiliis : 
Sed corpus tetigisse nocet, sed longa dedisse 

Oscula, sed femori cousernisse femur. 

Why blame I spell or herb ? in that or this 
Beauty no secret, magic aid doth find, 

*Tis in the clasped hand, the long, long kiss, 
And form with form all lovingly entwined. 

V. 3, 4- 

Non ullam rarae labefactes munere vestis 
Aut pelluciduli deliciis lapidis. 

Cf. Tibull. ii. 3, 51-54— 

Ut mea luxuria Nemesis fluat utque per urbem 

Incedat donis conspicienda meis. 
Ilia gerat vestes tenues, quas femina Coa 

Texuit, auratas disposuitque vias. 

Then swim in wealth and gifts, my love ; let none 
Walk through the streets more gorgeous to behold ; 

Wear silken robes by Coan maiden spun, 

And curiously inwrought with thread of gold. 

And ii. 4, 27-30, where the same poet, in quite a different 
humour, sings of the Coan robe — 

O pereat, quicunque legit viridesque smaragdos 
Et niveam Tyrio murice tingit ovem, 

Hie dat avaritiae causas et Coa puellis, 
Vestis et e rubro lucida concha mari. 



ILL USTRA TIVE NOTES. 285 

Perish the man who gathers emeralds green, 
And dyes the snowy wool with Tyrian shell, 

These, Coan robes, and Red Sea pearls, I ween, 
Have fill'd with avarice many an artless belle. 

V. 6. Valle sub alarum trux habitare caper. 

Cf. Ovid. Art. Am. i. 522 — 

Nee laedat naris virque paterque gregis. 
And Art. Am. iii. 193 — 

Quam paene admonui, ne trux caper iret in alas. 



Poem LXX. 

V. i, 2. 
Cf. Catull. lxxii. 1, 2. 

V. 3, 4. 

Dicit : sed mulier cupido quod dicit amanti, 
In vento, et rapida scribere oportet aqua. 

Cf. Tibull. i. 4, 21-24— 

Nee jurare time : Veneris perjuria venti 

Irrita per terras et freta summa ferunt. 
Gratia magna Jovi : vetuit pater ipse valere, 

Jurasset cupide quicquid ineptus amor. 

Fear not to swear : by winds athwart the air 

Are love's false vows o'er earth and ocean borne ; 

Great thanks to Jove : who hath annull'd whate'er 
Incautious love too eagerly hath sworn. 

And iii. 6, 47-50 — 

Etsi perque suos fallax juravit ocellos 

Junonemque suam perque suam Venerem, 
Nulla fides inerit : perjuria ridet amantum 

Jupiter et ventos irrita ferre jubet. 



286 EXCURSUS AND 

Though the deceitful maiden by her eyes 
And by her Venus and her Juno swear, 

Trust not : Jove smiles at lovers' perjuries, 
And bids the breezes scatter them in air. 

Cf. with v. 4. Epigr. Meleagr. civ. 5 (Edit. Mans.)— 
Xuz> <5'6 fieu opKid <pt)<Jiv kv vdart Keiva (pepeadat. 



POEM LXXIII. 
V.3- 

Omnia sunt ingrata : nihil fecisse benigne est. 

Cf. Horn. Odyss. iv. 695 — 

. ovde tls Zcttl x&pis ^eTb^^L(J^ , evepyecov. 



Poem LXXXIII. 
Cf. Catull. xcii. 






Poem LXXXV. 

Odi et amo. Ouare id faciam, fortasse requiris. 
Nescio : sed fieri sentio, et excrucior. 

Cf. Terent. Eunuch. 70-73. 

O indignum facinus ! nunc ego 

Et illam scelestam esse, et me miserum sentio ; 
Et taedet ; et amore ardeo ; etprudens, sciens, 
Vivus vidensque pereo ; nee, quid agam, scio. 

Oh, foul indignity ! at last I see 

Her faithlessness, and feel ^my misery, 

I loathe and burn, know, see, and feel this, too, 

That I 'm undone : I know not what to do. 



ILL USTRA TIVE NO TES. 287 



Poem LXXXVI. 



V. 5, 6. Lesbia Veneres. 

Cf. Burns — 

She, the fair sun of all her sex, 
Has blest my glorious day. 



Poem XCV. 

V. 8. Et laxas scombris saepe dabunt tunicas. 

Cf. Mart. Epigr. iv. 87, 8— 

Xec scombris tunicas dabis molestas. 



Poem XCVI. 

Si quidquam, &c. 

Vide Propert. iii. 32, 87-94 (U- 34> 87-94) — 

Haec quoque lascivi cantarunt scripta Catulli, 

Lesbia quis ipsa notior est Helena. 
Haec etiam docti confessa est pagina Calvi, 

Cum caneret miserae funera Quintiliae. 
Et modo formosa quam multa Lycoride Gallus 

Mortuus inferna vulnera lavit aqua ! 
Cynthia quin etiam versu laudata Properti, 

Hos inter si me ponere Fama volet. 

This was the theme of warm Catullus' lays, 

That made his Lesbia's more than Helen's fame, 

Thus learned Calvus told Quintilia's praise, 

Bewailed her death, and sung her honour'd name. 



288 EXCURSUS AND 

How many wounds from fair Lycoris' scorn 

Poor Gallus now has wash'd in Lethe's stream ! 

But Cynthia, too, will live to times unborn, 
If fame will but indulge her poet's dream. 



POEM CI. 
V. 10. 

Atque in perpetuum, frater, ave atque vale. 

Cf. Virg. Aen. xi. 97, 98 — 

Salve aeternum mihi, maxime Palla, 

Aeternumque vale ! . v 

Hail ! noblest Pallas, hail for evermore ! 
For evermore farewell ! 

And Stat. Silv. iii. 3, 208, 209— 

Salve supremum, senior mitissime patrum 
Supremumque vale. 



POEM CVII. 
V.3. 

Quare hoc est gratum, nobis quoque carius auro» 

Cf. Tibull. i. 8, 31-34— 

Carior est auro juvenis, cui levia fulgent 
Ora nee amplexus aspera barba terit. 
Huic tu candentes humero suppone lacertos, 
Et regum magnae despiciantur opes. 

Dearer than gold the youth with smooth blithe face, 
And no rough beard love's fond embrace to mar; 

Thine ivory arm beneath his shoulder place, 

And scorn the wealth of kings — thou 'rt richer far. 



ILL USTRA TIVE NO TES. 2 89 

With this poem, passim, compare Tibull. iii. 3, 23-38 — 
Sit mihi paupertas tecum jucunda, Neaera : 

At sine te regum munera nulla volo. 
O niveam, quae te poterit mihi reddere, lucem ! 

O mihi felicem terque quaterque diem ! 
At si, pro dulci reditu quaecunque voventur, 

Audiat aversa non meus aure deus, 
Nee me regna juvant nee Lydius aurifer amnis 

Nee quas terrarum sustinet orbis opes. 
Haec alii cupiant, liceat mihi paupere cultu 

Securo cara conjuge posse frui. 
Adsis et timidis faveas, Saturnia, votis, 

Et faveas concha, Cypria, vecta tua. 
Aut, si fata negant reditum tristesque sorores, 

Stamina quae ducunt quaeque futura neunt, 
Me vocet in vastos amnes nigramque paludem 

Dives in ignava luridus Orcus aqua. 

With thee, Neaera, want has wealth of charms ; 

The gifts of kings I scorn, deprived of thee ; 
Bright light that will restore thee to my arms ! 

Oh thrice and four times happy day to me ! 

Should Love, with favouring smile, my care behold, 
And hear my vows breathed for thy sweet return, 

Then Lydia's river, rolling sands of gold, 

Realms, and the w T ealth of worlds, I '11 proudly spurn. 

Let others covet these : on humble fare 

Let me with thee, mine own, serenely dwell ; 

Come, Juno, smile on this my timid prayer, 
Smile, Cyprian goddess, w r afted on thy shell. 

But if the Fates deny the boon I crave, 

Grim Three who draw and spin the threads of doom. 
Hell ! call me to thy lurid, sluggish wave, 

Thy gulfy streams, and marsh of ebon gloom. 

And Hor. Od. iii. 9 — 

Horace. While I was all in all to thee, 
Nor any swain preferred to me, 



290 EXCURSUS AND 

Round your fair neck his arms dared fling, 
I scorn'd even Persia's king. 

Lydia. While for no other fair you burn'd, 
Nor Chloe look'd on Lydia spurn' d, 
An honour'd head I then could rear, 
For Ilia more than peer. 

Horace. Now Chloe thrills me with desire, 
A lady skill'd on lute or lyre, 
For whom the darts of death I '11 prove, 
If heaven will spare my love. 

Lydia. I and my Thurian Calais 

Together live in mutual bliss, 
For whom I '11 die and die again, 

If heaven will spare my swain. 

Horace. Should Venus once again provoke 
Us both to try love's brazen yoke, 
And fair-hair'd Chloe leave my home, » 
Oh, say, would Lydia come ? 

Lydia. Though fairer than the sun he shone, 
Thou light as down by breezes blown, 
And fretful as the raging sea, 

I 'd live, I 'd die with thee. 



Poem CX. 



Cf. Priap. ii. (Ovidii) " Priapus." 

Obscure poteram tibi dicere, da mihi, quod tu 

Des licet assidue, nil tamen inde perit. 
Da mihi, quod cupies frustra dare forsitan olim, 

Dum tenet obsessas invida barba genas ; 
Quodque Jovi dederat, qui, raptus ab alite sacra, 

Miscet amatori pocula grata suo ; 



ILLUSTRATIVE NOTES. 29 1 

Quod virgo prima cupido dat nocte marito, 

Dum timet alterius vulnus inepta loci. 
Simplicius multo est, da paedicare, Latine 

Dicere ; quid faciam ? Crassa Minerva mea est, 

Love, a kiss I did covertly ask ; 

And, believe me, such tokens I prize ; 
Though you ply evermore the sweet task, 

Oh remember the charm never dies. 

Come, then, grant me the favour I seek, 

Or your coyness you yet may regret, 
When the wrinkle has furrow'd your cheek, 

And the sun of your beauty is set. 

When the all-sacred eagle pick'd up 

And presented young Gan to King Jove, 

First the little chap mix'd him a cup, 
And then shower'd on him kisses of love. 

On the night when a maiden is wed, 

And her fond lover calls her his own, 
Although many a thought fills her head, 

Wont she give him a kiss when alone ? 

Come, then, come to my arms, darling true ! 

In plain language, come, kiss me at once : 
Oh consent, love, or what shall I do ? 

He who misses a chance is a dunce. 



Poem CXI II. 
V. v 2. Mucillam (Mucilla ?). 



Ballantyne & Company -, Printers ', Edinburgh. 



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